Remember when the Internet was sold to us as a technology that would grant unprecedented access to important data, radically democratizing information? Well, we got a little sidetracked with pornography and sneezing pandas, but weโre finally getting around to it!
Maryland will become the latest (with an emphasis on โlateโ โ 30 other states have already beaten us to it) to implement an โOpen Dataโ program, which would make thousands of state documents available to the public via the Internet. (Gosh, remember the late โ90s when we were constantly using the phrase โvia the Internetโ just to hear ourselves say it?)
For over a year, Baltimore has been running a similar program with its city documents. And according to The Sun, itโs been used by Sun reporters โmany times.โ โOpenBaltimoreโ applications even helped the paper build an interactive map of speed camera locations in and around the city.
The state hasnโt figured out yet exactly what data is the most important to make available, or in what format it would be most useful. And thatโs what makes this kind of old-school, information-superhighway Internet project so exciting. You can almost feel the paradigm shifting. Listen, I know that weโre just talking about government documents here, but seriously, this could be really cool.

