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Personal website of journalist Jonathan Walker

It's hard to believe, but the Government is trying to feed us information and we're turning them down.

The Office of Public Sector Information is busy making all sorts of facts and figures available for people to access using an application process interface (API) which allows them to get information from a Government database and re-present the facts on their own website, in their own way.

For example, you could let someone enter their postcode in a box on a website and present them with their local school results, crime figures, roadworks etc.

I'm not sure what's currently available, but the Government is actually asking people what they want and trying to give it to them. It's had plenty of responses, but how many of them have come from newspapers?

The average journalist doesn't have the technical skills to make use of this data (it takes some programming to grab the right info and present it well). But major newspaper companies should have people who can do this.

There are many other sources of information too. TheyWorkForYou.com allows people to access its database (it might charge a commercial business for this) and if local councils aren't doing it, we should ask them to.

For an example of what I'm talking about, take a look at US website everyblock.com.

Here's a small sample of information everyblock.com offers about the Midtown South neighbourhood in New York.

everyblock.com

Someone one day will do something similar in the UK. I think it's an obvious one for local newspapers. We should be adding a service similar to what EveryBlock provides to our websites.

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Richard Morris, April 23, 2009
The problem is that 'local newspapers' aren't really newspapers at all. Merely free advertising sheets with added press releases. The are passive and show little interest in truly local news unless it is presented to them on a plate. For example both I and Andrew Mitchell tried some years ago to get the SC Observer (editorial offices in Tamworth) to print conviction lists from the local magistrates court. Point blank refusal - 'resources' (other 'paid for' local newspapers have been doing it for years, of course). Now they print them - but only, I am sure, because the court supplies an electronic list of the convictions.
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