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photo OBdL acceptance in OpenStreetMap data (compiled by Fabian Schmidt) - green = contributor has accepted the license, red = contributor has not accepted the license, yellow = edited by contributors who have and have not accepted the license. Red streets would be unavailable after the switch to the new license (which is essentially a share alike license).

OBdL acceptance in OpenStreetMap data (compiled by Fabian Schmidt) - green = contributor has accepted the license, red = contributor has not accepted the license, yellow = edited by contributors who have and have not accepted the license. Red streets would be unavailable after the switch to the new license (which is essentially a share alike license).

2 years ago

November 16, 2010
quote
A very interesting and well-documented example of this empowering of the empowered can be found in the work of Solly Benjamin and his colleagues looking at the impact of the digitization of land records in Bangalore. Their findings were that newly available access to land ownership and title information in Bangalore was primarily being put to use by middle and upper income people and by corporations to gain ownership of land from the marginalized and the poor. The newly digitized and openly accessible data allowed the well to do to take the information provided and use that as the basis for instructions to land surveyors and lawyers and others to challenge titles, exploit gaps in title, take advantage of mistakes in documentation, identify opportunities and targets for bribery, among others. They were able to directly translate their enhanced access to the information along with their already available access to capital and professional skills into unequal contests around land titles, court actions, offers of purchase and so on for self-benefit and to further marginalize those already marginalized.
Certainly the newly digitized information was “accessible” to all on an equal basis but the availability of resources to translate that “access” into a beneficial “effective use” was directly proportional to the already existing resources available to those to whom the access was being provided.  The old story about the pauper and the millionaire having equal opportunity to purchase a printing press as a means to promote their interests can be seen as holding equally here as in the 19th century.

2 years ago

September 6, 2010
reblogged via interestingsnippets