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    Give the Public Access to Public Records

    Knight 2007 News Challenge Winner

    yourmapper380.JPG

    I'm on an open API kick here at IdeaLab, so here's the second of three entries on the potential of application programming interface for news organizations. (I'll post a final video interview on Monday.)

    This is a way to give the public true access to public records. Oddly, that rarely happens now, with media organizations playing gatekeeper and releasing stories through the editorial process -- but not the raw data itself.

    In this 8-minute video interview I conducted yesterday at the NetSquared conference -- notice the venue: Cisco, not a media company -- founder-CEO Michael Schnuerle discusses Louisville-based YourMapper.com, a young startup that hopes to make a business in part by helping the public gain public access to public records. The company has already licensed its mapping technology to at least one news publication.

    Central to YourMapper's plan is an open API, which can prove incredibly powerful when paired with the proper datasets. Schneurle even waged a months-long battle with Kentucky officials wielding only the Freedom of Information Act before the state attorney general came down on his side.

    News organizations ought to get behind this effort by releasing their own open API to public records in their communities. Now, here's the important twist: Instead of just making the data available internally, for its staff to analyze and reinterpret, news publications ought to bring readers and users into such efforts.

    As I said in Tuesday's post, it's about enlisting users in a collaborative effort to tap into rich sources of information about what's happening in your reader's communities.

    Call it data jockey crowdsourcing. I'll wager we'll see scores of such efforts in the coming years.

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    Featured Comment

    I guess that combining the fixed rules for audio, video, image and text will be significant, as are the "open" intuitive based rules that the user contributes.

    jerry
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