Licensing Open Government Data

Abstract

This article focuses on the legal issues associated with open government data licenses. This study compares current open data licenses and argues that licensing terms reflect policy considerations, which are quite different from those contemplated in business transactions or shared in typical commons communities. This article investigates the ambiguous legal status of data together with the new wave of open government data, which concerns some fundamental intellectual property (IP) questions not covered by, or analyzed in depth in, the current literature. Moreover, this study suggests that government should choose or adapt open data licenses according to their own IP regimes. In the end, this article argues that the design or choice of open government data license forms an important element of information policy; government, therefore, should make this decision in accordance with their policy goals and in compliance with their own jurisdictions' IP laws.

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