In a sign of a change in its excessively cautious approach towards classified information,the Centre will be asking the Ministry of Defence to explore declassifying spatial data and making it available to the general public. The above-mentioned data,namely geographical maps and terrestrial datasets,is already in the possession of adversary nations.
The Defence Ministry will be asked for its views on the subject at the Cabinet meeting on Thursday where approval is likely to be sought for laying broad parameters on evolving a national policy on data-sharing and accessibility.
Besides asking all government departments to reclassify data into sensitive and non-sensitive within the next six months,the Centre also proposes to draw up a negative list that will contain the genuinely sensitive information. The negative list is proposed to be reviewed every five years.
Sources said these steps are being taken keeping in view provisions of the RTI Act besides empowering citizens to secure access to information. While there is a need to restrict dissemination of data impacting national security,the argument favoring such a policy is the large amount of non-sensitive data generated using public funds and the rationale for the public to have access to it.
For long now,successive governments at the Centre have adopted a blinkered approach towards declassifying information,especially geo-spatial data that also has commercial value. According to officials,the same information maybe available freely on the internet or other media,but the government has been forced to turn a blind eye and deny the data to the public as it is defined as classified.
Once Cabinet approval is given,the Department of Science and Technology DST which will be the nodal agency involved,will also prepare the format whether analogue or digital for storage of the data. The DST will also work on a pricing policy to decide on the charges to be levied on information accessed by the public.
The Department of Space had earlier objected to the new policy on data-sharing on the grounds that a National Map Policy 2005 is already in place. However,the GoM has overruled these objections.