The Rudd Government has released its response to the Government 2.0 Taskforce Report. The Report advises Government on how it can utilise Web 2.0 technologies to provide greater public access to Government information and increase Government transparency.
The Government supported most of the Taskforce’s 13 recommendations. Importantly, one of the few recommendations it rejected was the recommendation that responsibility for Crown Copyright and licensing be removed from the Attorney General’s Department (AGD) and placed with the proposed Office of the Information Commissioner (or the lead agency responsible for Government 2.0).
The Government’s response states that, “These functions are best performed by, and should remain, with AGD”.
Secondly, while the Government has supported the notion of “open attribution” licensing for works covered by Crown Copyright, it has not endorsed the Taskforce’s recommendation that works covered by Crown Copyright should be automatically licensed under a Creative Commons BY licence. Instead, it states that, “the selection and use of an appropriate open attribution license will remain the responsibility of [Government] agencies on a case-by-case basis.”
Further, the Government has called for the AGD to review the Government’s Intellectual Property policy to encourage the use of open licensing.
For a copy of the Government’s report see:
http://gov2.net.au/response-to-the-government-2-0-report/
For a copy of the Australian Copyright Council’s submission to Government on 2.0 see:
http://www.copyright.org.au/admin/cms-acc1/_images/10210748194c97fc2a2f9dc.pdf
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