Please let me know what you find out.
Full section (f) reads:
(f) For purposes of this section, the term-
(1) "agency" as defined in section 551 (1) of this title includes any
executive department, military department, Government corporation,
Government controlled corporation, or other establishment in the executive
branch of the Government (including the Executive Office of the President),
or any independent regulatory agency; and
(2) "record" and any other term used in this section in reference to
information includes-
(A) any information that would be an agency record subject to the
requirements of this section when maintained by an agency in any format,
including an electronic format; and
(B) any information described under subparagraph (A) that is maintained for
an agency by an entity under Government contract, for the purposes of
records management.
Rick
______________
Rick Blum
Coordinator, Sunshine in Government Initiative
Browse the FOIA Files -- over *500* stories relying on FOIA at
sunshineingovernment.org
>From the appropriations document:
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This is probably like throwing a grenade into a crowd, but...
I had a thought about this case a month ago: Given that some
people/orgs/etc. add specific value to raw sources of public data,
might we not want some sort of protection for that value? That is, in
the U.S., at least, pure data (without an expressive element) doesn't
get copyright protection, although firms like CrimeReports.com can
bind people through contracts and licenses (and terms of service, I
guess, harumpf).
But maybe there's a need for a sort of Creative Commons for derivative
works of public data. That is, a more informal (although CC is not
necessarily informal!) type of agreement that asks, "We spend a good
deal of sweat and tears on improving this data, we'd appreciate x, y,
z in response to that."
This could take the form of something like the new-fangled
"Creator-Endorsed" mark that the good folks at Question Copyright have
worked on:
http://questioncopyright.org/creator_endorsed
Anyway, as an IP skeptic, you all will probably think I'm off my
meds... but I started a paper on this topic ("How can we best
incentivize adding value to open government data?") and I got a bit
stuck here (esp. in the sense that it's a local issue... the EU has
the data directive which allows copyright-like interests in data) and
haven't done more with the idea since.
best, Joe
--
Joseph Lorenzo Hall
ACCURATE Postdoctoral Research Associate
UC Berkeley School of Information
Princeton Center for Information Technology Policy
http://josephhall.org/
Interesting idea (and thanks for the Creator-Endorsed Mark shout-out,
Joseph).
Just to clarify, the CE Mark is not informal -- it's just not a license.
It's a certification mark: distributors have the right to display the
mark when they meet the artist's (or "creator's") terms. It's enforced,
but by trademark law, not copyright law.
I'm not sure whether that clarification helps address the issue you were
speculating about. It may well be that data certification can be the
basis of a business model in some cases; that's sort of what real estate
title companies do, I guess.
Best,
-Karl