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Mapping Hacksby Schuyler Erle, Rich Gibson and Jo WalshThe power of the pressOctober 3rd, 2006 by Rich“Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one.” AJ Liebling Jo Walsh, our co-author on Mapping Hacks, has never forgotten this. Sometimes it is annoying. I want to say “but look, you can do all this cool stuff with this free (but not open) API? Why struggle to reinvent the map widget?” Why indeed? Because if you don’t control your tools you don’t control your own story. And if you don’t control your own story your creative acts are subject to the oversite of people whose motivations are not the same as yours. When we were writing Google Maps HacksĀ karllohner+mappinghacks@gmail.comwrote the Perl module WebService::GoogleMaps. It was cool. With a tiny bit of code you could download a Google Maps tile. So I wrote a little demonstration script and put it on my server http://testingrange.com/cgi-bin/gmtile.cgi (now replaced with a rant) I then spent time and wrote up a hack for the book. At some point in there I mentioned it in one comment to a blog post on the Make Magazine blog. Offering a slight amount of slack to Google, they arguably were making more data available than we had available before, and access to that data just had a few little limitations. For a long time I even bought that line. But then October 1st, 2006, over 15 months later, I get a literal copy of the same ‘oh we are so sensitive to developers but take it down anyway’ letter that Google sent out a year ago to some other folks who had done something similar. So I’ve got a take down letter from Google. wOOt, I suppose. The thing is, the letter uses the same language, the same argument, from 15 months ago, that my little code “jeopardizes our ability to make Google Maps available to the public because it encourage downloading of our copyrighted images and data.” It isn’t us, they say, but that mean data provider, and if developers do interesting things that we don’t allow the data provider will pull the data. Oh. Really? There was a period of a few weeks, maybe months, where there were actual negotiations, and that line mattered. But now? Not so much. As for encouraging downloading? That is sort of the way innovation works. And isn’t it sweet that Google allows us to make Google Maps’s mashups with their copyrighted images and data? Sure. It is all great, until you want to do something outside of their rules. Sure, they are quite open, especially compared to where we were, but they are also locked down. You can make maps with their data if you give them information about your site. Every time someone looks at a Google Maps mashup Google knows about it. So they know that people who read ’serialkiller.com’ spend their time zooming into aerial photography of desolute stretches of coast and desert. Have a nice day. Posted in licensing, collaborative mapping, data, community, mashup, public geodata, annoying_gits | You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Trackback from your own site. 4 Responses to “The power of the press”
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