9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (lift) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (lift 12 - Feb 24 2012 - Geneva) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (Rufus Pollock - Stories) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 [Rufus Pollock] Just to say for those of you who don't know: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 the Open Knowledge Foundation is a non-profit -- not for profit 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 founded in 2004 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and which builds tools and communities 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 to create, use and share open information 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and that's information that anyone can use, reuse and redistribute. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (missed words: "and as such"? check) we've been working on Open Data for quite a long time, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 since we started in 2004. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And today, I want to start this story by going back in time 5'000 years, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 to ancient Mesopotamia. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 There, between the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 flourished the Sumerian civilization. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And they were confronted by a problem. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 They were confronted by the limitations of human memory 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 in the recording of taxes, food and other goods. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And those ancient civil servants and businessmen hit on a novel solution: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 What they decided to do was they would start counting things with small clay chips, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 which they would bake inside of a clay -- a little clay box 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and then mark, on the outside of that box, what they were counting. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 You know, was it grain, was it tax payments, whatever. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And so, born out of necessity for a state and a society, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 came one o the great information technology revolutions of all time: writing. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 The Sumerians invented writing via cuneiform. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And if we fast-forward from that a few thousand years, we come to the UK census. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Again, it's always interesting that states governments are often at the forefront 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 of at least driving information technology and information systems innovations. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 The UK census: again, the state that it is in during the Napoleon Wars. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Desire to count the population more accurately: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 we have the first UK census in 1801. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And in the US, they also had censuses, in fact starting in 1790. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And one of the problems encountered in the 1880 census 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 was they tabulated the census by hand. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And by the 1880 census, it was taking seven years to tabulate the census. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 So often you got -- take the 1880, it wasn't until 1887 they actually had any data they could use. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And they calculated that for the next census in 1890, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 they wouldn't be finished by 1900. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 They still wouldn't have the results of the census by the time they started the next one. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 They had a crisis of information technology. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And what they went and did is they commissioned Owen (check) Hollrith 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 to build the first automatic tabulator. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And for those of you who know your company history, of course, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Owen (check) Hollrith company went on to be one of the founders, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 if you like, one of the companies that came and created IBM. (2:38) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And IBM, by the sixties, were building their -- they replaced those hand -- 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 those kind of wooden tabulators with this stuff: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 digital tabulators, the modern computer of this age 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and again, much of this -- I don't know if you guys know -- 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 IBM would have gone bankrupt 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 if it hadn't been for Franklin Roosevelt passing the Social Security Act in the States, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 which necessitated (check) a huge amount of new tabulation. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 So, again, a lot of innovation in this space came out of government need 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and also, of course, the nuclear program, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 the other great needer of computer power. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And today, today, we find ourselves again in the midst of a revolution. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 It's a revolution driven by two needs: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 one that has been the same throughout the histories I've just shown, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 information complexity, which is the necessity, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and information technology, which is the opportunity. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And what we're doing in this case is a policy innovation, if you like. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 We're innovating by opening up information. 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