Collaborate and work in the open by default
Open Government is a concept that can not only improve public
trust, but also improve services and policy outcomes. In addition,
some governments have a legal requirement to consider or publish
service reporting or open source code. People working with
government directly or as a third party must consider how
government can share the service’s non-sensitive data, code,
evidence, research, and decision making openly. This includes
using open standards where possible and open-source licensing
where required. The
Digital
Nations Charter
Questions to ask:
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How will the general public find out information about the service, such as its compliance or performance?
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How will citizens participate in the design or ongoing improvements to the system or service?
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Have you explored how other governments might have solved this problem, including the use of reusable tools?
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How might the government customer share information across their own organization and jurisdiction?
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How does the government customer want to share this work so that other governments can reuse it?
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Can you share your outputs with appropriate open source licenses and channels?