Tom and Greg — both good points, and I want to respond to each.
Tom — your concern is completely valid and I share it. AW has a privacy policy and terms of service that govern how contributed data can be used, and I don't think the development of more modern apps or features for the platform changes that. Any third-party tool or integration built on top of AW's data — including anything I'm building — has to operate within those same terms. That's not a loophole problem, I see it as a constraint that shapes the whole design. The data belongs to the community in spirit, and to AW in terms of stewardship and responsibility, and that must be protected.
Greg — I hear you on Discord or Slack. My only thought is that any separate channel is most useful if it stays connected to the people actively working on the platform. If there's already a roadmap discussion happening somewhere, I'd love to know where — I'd rather listen and contribute there than spin up something parallel.
My own interest is less in consuming AW's data independently and more in offering development capacity and architecture thinking that helps AW move faster — cost optimization, moderation tooling, the trip reporting UX, the streamflow UX, better data pipelines. Things Owen mentioned as actual pain points.
On the broader question of building independent river databases, I've come to the conclusion that it's not the right path. There is enough public data out there to seed a new database, but it will never have the depth or accuracy of decades of community input that AW has collected. I tried doing something similar using AI, but AI is only as good as the data it's given — left to find its own sources it hallucinates, conflates, and produces content no paddler should trust their safety to. Especially when it comes to rapid descriptions, reach descriptions, and flow range calculations. The only approach that worked for me is Retrieval Augmented Generation — where AI is given verified source data and reasons over that, rather than going looking for it on its own. For these reasons a contribution pipeline back to AW makes more sense to me than an extraction pipeline away from it.
I think some of this conversation belongs right here in this forum. The StreamTeam is the exact community that has both the domain knowledge and the motivation to shape what AW builds next.
— Ian