Open movements in education, government, technology, science, and more are working to remove barriers that prevent the public from fully accessing听these institutions, systems, and fields.听Underlying each of these movements is one critical need: open use of information, much of which is funded through public investment.听
The federal government collects, produces, and distributes more information than any other organization, public or private, in the United States.听Unfortunately, restricted access to this information听is all too common, and comes with real costs.鈥淏arriers to public use of information stifle scientific advancement, social innovation, cultural understanding, and education鈥攊n short, the ability to learn and progress as a nation,鈥 senior policy analyst Lindsey Tepe听argues in a new report from 国产视频鈥檚 Education Policy program.
InThe Case for Open Use Policies: Realizing the Full Value of Publicly Funded Information, Tepe听details efforts to make valuable government information鈥攊ncluding data, academic research, and other educational resources鈥攎ore open, especially during the previous eight years of the Obama administration. Starting with a modest request for each federal agency to identify three high-value data sets to make openly available to the public,听data.gov was built to听house critical information on education, health, energy, governance, and more. Agencies funding more than $100 million in research and development听were required to put in place a plan to make that research more accessible. Further, the Departments of Labor, Education, and State, the National Institutes of Health,听the National Science Foundation, and a number of other agencies have piloted the use of Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licenses with some of their grantees, allowing the public to openly use resources produced with each agency鈥檚 limited competitive grant funds.
This report makes the case for听why听these kinds of open use policies should be the default for managing all publicly funded information.听鈥淥pen use policies would begin with the assumption that all information produced by the federal government, and information produced with federal funds, should be publicly accessible and fully usable,鈥 Tepe writes. The ability to openly use this听information听will advance听open movements across the country and around the world: 鈥淯sing information鈥攁llowing people to download, copy, keep, analyze, or reuse it for any purpose鈥攇ives those who paid for it full rights to think about it, share, and ultimately create more information, for everyone鈥檚 benefit.鈥
The Case for Open use Policies听outlines听recommendations that would move the federal government toward stronger open use policies, to make the free exchange of information and ideas a reality.
The full paper with recommendations is available .