Web inventor charts new course for govt data

Web inventor charts new course for govt data

By Alice Cannet

Sir Tim Berners Lee has said his new job of opening up government data was 'beyond politics and beyond global borders' today.

The world-wide-web creator was asked by Gordon Brown to help make government data more accessible online.

"I think there's a public demand for transparency. This is way beyond party politics and beyond global borders," Sir Tim said.

The prime minister hired Sir Tim on Wednesday, telling MPs he '"would help us drive the opening up of access to government data in the web over the coming month," in order for government information to be accessible and useful for the widest possible group of people.

Sir Tim spoke to the BBC from Boston, where he lives, and said that the public was getting increasingly eager to gain access to government data.

"This is our data, this is our taxpayers' money which has created this data so I would like to be able to see it please," he said.

Last Friday, Alan Sugar was appointed as enterprise tsar by the prime minister as part of his cabinet reshuffle and government overhaul.

Sir Tim, however, did not liken their roles and told the BBC: "I am not comparing myself with Sir Alan Sugar in any way, in any dimension," when he was asked about public figures hired by the government as 'window-dressing'.

Campaigning for better access to government data, he got people to chant 'raw data now' during a Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) conference in February.

He told the audience: "You have no idea about the excuses people come up with to keep data out of your hands, even when you as taxpayers have paid for it.

"If you know about some data in a government department, often you find that these people, they're very tempted to keep it.

"You hug your database, you don't want to let it go until you've made a beautiful website for it.

"Make a beautiful website, but first give us the unadulterated data, we want the data," he told the conference."

Sir Tim Berners Lee conceived the technologies behind the Web while working in Switzerland in the early 90s at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (Cern) which built the first web site put on line on 6 August 1991.

Political news to your inbox

Fill in your details to receive Politics.co.uk's brand of informed, in-depth and independent coverage of Westminster to your inbox

Hot topics

Britain's great energy debate

How the power gets to Britain's homes in the next century remains a matter of deep controversy

As the next general election begins to loom over the horizon, the debate over Britain's future energy policy mix is starting to hot up - and nothing seems guaranteed.

The Heathrow third runway debate

Heathrow's third runway is just one of many options

There won't be a final decision on Britain's long-term aviation strategy until after the 2015 general election - but an aggressive national debate is already underway.

Opinion Former Events

BSIA: Information Destruction Exhibition & Conference 2013

Following the great success of the BSIA's Information Destruction Conference and Exhibition in May 2012, we are pleased to annouce that the event is returning again in June 2013. This one-day conference and exhibition is aimed at key decision makers in organisations that carry out the secure destruction of confidential material.