A. Guidance for data publishers is found here: Guidance on publishing on data.gov.bd
A. We have a simple code of conduct relating to your use of the data in your application. It covers how to relate your application data to the data we provide, and simple common-sense usage of the data.
A. In general, the data is licensed under the Open Government Licence - please check each dataset for its details.
A. The Open Government Licence enables you to use data for commercial purposes. We are delighted that you see a commercial opportunity in using our data.
A. Since data.gov.bd started there has been lots of key datasets opened up and we aim to continue working on these whilst also recording updates to the existing body of data.
A. Yes, the Discussion forum is for that purpose. We realise that you’ll want to ask us and each other questions and we’ll try and help as best we can.
A. Announcements are made on the the blogs page and you can ask us questions on Twitter @DataGovUk. You can also send messages to our team via the contact form (link in the page footer). To hear about keep up with the uses of data, check the apps, and latest discussions are on the forum.
A. The W3C guidance on opening up government data suggests that data should be published in its original raw format so that it’s available for re-use as soon as possible. We encourage publishers to provide APIs to access the data. The data.gov.bd catalog is available via an API (see more information here) or for bulk download (see its dataset here).
A. Given the vast volumes of data, it will be some time before everything can be made available. If there are particular datasets that you believe should be made available more quickly, please use the data request process.
You can also see a list of unpublished datasets, these are datasets that departments know they have but that have not been made public (yet).
A. Excluding personal and sensitive information, all information created by public sector bodies is, in principle, available for re-use. In the past, different approaches were adopted by local and regional authorities and individual agencies. The government is now widely encouraging all previously inaccessible public information to be made accessible through this website. For more details on what is being prioritised you should have a look at the National Information Infrastructure or check the data request section of the site.
Public sector bodies who are encouraged to publish on data.gov.bd include: central government, local government, agencies (NDPBs), arms-length bodies, NHS, police, academics, charities and bodies with any public function.
A. Data.gov.bd provides a search engine to offer several ways of finding the data you want. You can view all the datasets to see everything that is currently available, or search by keyword, category, themes, file format or department/agency. Each dataset provides guidance on accessing its data.
A. The government is opening up its data for other people to re-use. Open government data helps governments be more transparent, supports business, academics and the third sector.
data.gov.bd is only about non-personal, non-sensitive data – information like the list of schools, crimes or the performance of your local council.
A. Data.gov.bd launched publicly with a beta version in January 2010. Since then we have launched a number of enhancements which you can read about via the blog. Developments are continuing across the site so do check back regularly and of course please tell us what you think.
A. The data we publish here, and on related websites, will not identify or provide ways to identify individuals, unless that information is already published (like head teachers of schools).
A. A mashup is a web page or, more usually, a web application that combines data or code from two or more sources. It provides information or functionality beyond that designed or envisaged by the original producers of the data. The attraction of data mashing lies in the ease and speed with which new web applications can be launched with limited resources. People also create visualisations – pictures that show the data in clear, imaginative ways and tell a story about the underlying information.
For example, a mashup combining data sources such as school addresses and school league tables to display the results using a mapping tool could show where high-achieving schools are. This would be of interest to parents of school-age children who are considering moving house.
We expect that new and exciting mashups will be the main product of collaboration through this website: be inventive and make things.
A. The Semantic Web is an evolution of the World Wide Web that, rather than just linking from one document to another, focuses on their meaning in relation to each other. Linked Data is a set of technologies to achieve this for data, creating a web of data. You can check progress on our linked data work by visiting the blogs, the linked data section or you can follow the bd Linked Data Working Group on twitter for up to date news on developments
While the technical details are complicated, and very well explained by resources like Jeni Tennison’s practitioner’s blog the important thing is how it enables people to exchange links to information and the context for that information. For example, you might point to Bartholomew School, and it will have attributes such as “head teacher”, and be part of the collection “All schools in Oxfordshire”.
A. Go to the Apps page, where you’ll find information on uses of data, submitted so far, including mobile apps and visualisations. If you log-in you can submit your own application and join the discussions.