Title
The Cost(s) of Geospatial Open Data.
Abstract
The provision of open data by governments at all levels has rapidly increased over recent years. Given that one of the dominant motivations for the provision of open data is to generate value', both economic and civic, there are valid concerns over the costs incurred in this pursuit. Typically, costs of open data are framed as internal to the data providing government. Building on the strong history of GIScience research on data provision via spatial data infrastructures, this article considers both the direct and indirect costs of open data provision, framing four main areas of indirect costs: citizen participation challenges, uneven provision across geography and user types, subsidy of private sector activities, and the creation of inroads for corporate influence on government. These areas of indirect cost lead to the development of critical questions, including constituency, purpose, enablement, protection, and priorities. These questions are posed as a guide to governments that provide open data in addressing the indirect costs of open data.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1111/tgis.12283
TRANSACTIONS IN GIS
Keywords
Field
DocType
open data,open government,spatial data infrastructures,technology adoption,technology impacts
Framing (construction),Geospatial analysis,Subsidy,Indirect costs,Data mining,Public economics,Open data,Computer science,Private sector,Open government,Government
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
21.0
3.0
1361-1682
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.38
12
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Peter A. Johnson162.46
renee e sieber2332.85
Teresa Scassa3183.26
Monica Stephens4542.70
Pamela Robinson520.38