About the Author:  Sean Gorman founded FortiusOne in 2005 to bring location based analytics to the mass market. Sean brings over 10 years of experience at the forefront of the geospatial revolution as a researcher, practitioner, and entrepreneur at FortiusOne. Through both academic and entreprenurial efforts he has been working to make geographic data more accessible to the public since 1997 culminating in the creation of GeoCommons – a crowd-sourced repository of statistical data and social feeds that can be easily mapped, remixed and reused by non-technical users. Sean has been featured in media such as, Wired, Der Spiegel, ABC, Washington Post, Business 2.0, MSNBC, CBS and CNN. He also holds a PhD. From George Mason University in Public Policy where he was the Provost’s High Potential Scholar and was the recipient of the Fischer Prize. He has published dozens of articles on geographic data sharing and analysis, and authored the book Networks, Complexity and Security: The Role of Public Policy in Critical Infrastructure Protection. Read more from this author


Sean Wohltman has an insightful post on the need to make the OpenStreetMap and Google MapMaker communities compatible for disasters. He makes some great points about the challenges of responders having to deal with two different data sets that are not conflated. The problem is apparent when you look at the differences in coverage between the two projects.

wohltman

Source: Sean Wohltman

I think this raises a bigger point that is a major snafu during disasters – licenses to data that restrict use. Whether it is vector data like roads or raster data like imagery there are almost always licenses that dictate how the data can be used. This often complicates or completely prevents the redistribution of data to those in need, or prevents the remixing and reuse of data. You can’t post data from a variety of sources to a common repository because users have to agree to a myriad of licenses governing each data set. This can be a nightmare to relief organizations just trying to get data to the right people in a rapid manner.

If we can all get our lawyers to take a back seat to the greater good I’d lobby all companies, NGO’s and governments contributing data during disasters to place that data under a creative commons zero license. CC0 states that:

CC0 enables scientists, educators, artists and other creators and owners of copyright-protected content to waive copyright interests in their works and thereby place them as completely as possible in the public domain, so that others may freely build upon, enhance and reuse the works for any purposes without restriction under copyright.

Data contributors can always put a temporal limitation on the data, so the content is not abused after the disaster for other purposes. I’ve seen a lot of tweets admonishing the geo-companies of using the Haiti disaster as a marketing opportunity. Utilizing CC0 is an opportunity to put corporate interests to the side and put well being of the victims and responders up front.

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3 Responses to “The Case for Using Creative Commons Zero for Disasters”

  1. A Call for a Coordinated and Conflated Effort | Spatial Sustain Says:

    [...] a response, Sean Gorman points to issues of the license that need to be resolved. His point is that a creative commons zero license would be the best way [...]

  2. Brain Off » How to improve our work in Haiti? :: Mikel Maron :: Building Digital Technology for Our Planet Says:

    [...] Gorman suggests a time and geography limited CC-0 license on geodata, in order to move things forward. I’m not taking a personal view on this possibility, [...]

  3. Haiti OpenStreetMaps + Google Map Maker « Kelso’s Corner Says:

    [...] Wohltman’s post Haitian Earthquake Emphasizes Danger of a Split Geo Community (seen over at FortiusOne’s Off the Map blog advocating for Creative Commons 0 “zero” [...]

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