Remote sensing: A case for moving space data towards the public good

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

This paper discusses whether current international and national regulation of remote sensing activities achieves a true balance between proprietary interests of producers of remote sensing data and information and the needs of the community in accessing that data and information. By subjecting remote sensing data to general copyright restrictions that are often coupled with exclusive licences, irrespective of type or use of data and/or information, the development of important secondary information markets could be negatively hampered. In the long run, over-regulating access to space data may prove counter-productive in the information age. Using examples of different modes of information dissemination currently being practised, the paper highlights the balances to be drawn between legal issues of private ownership of data and information and public good interests. It concludes with suggestions for a more coherent regulatory approach.

Original languageEnglish
JournalSpace Policy
Volume37
Pages (from-to)162-170
Number of pages9
ISSN0265-9646
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.08.2016
Externally publishedYes

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Zur Untreue im Unternehmensverbund
  2. 4/ Queering Death in the Medical and Health Humanities
  3. Social life cycle assessment
  4. Judgement of loudness and acoustical context
  5. The importance of ecosystem services for rural inhabitants in a changing cultural landscape in Romania
  6. Media Freedom and the Escalation of State Violence
  7. Neustrukturierung des Mittleren Freihafens zum Central Terminal Steinwerder (CTS)
  8. Assessment of the environmental persistence and long-range transport of endosulfan
  9. Exhibiting Earth History
  10. The concept of personal initiative
  11. Agricultural residues as feedstocks for lactic acid fermentation
  12. Gender and Diversity aspects in Engineering Education and their impact on the design of engineering curricula
  13. Worker Participation and Firm Performance
  14. Gender equality and democracy
  15. Culture, Technology, and Process in “Media Theories”
  16. Debating accounting and sustainability: from incompatibility to rapprochement in the pursuit of corporate sustainability
  17. Tuition fees and funding - barriers for non-traditional students ?
  18. Erneuerungen in der Lehrerbildung
  19. 10 Jahre Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe (FFB) der Universität Lüneburg
  20. ‚Places of Remembrance’: spaces for historical and political literacy
  21. Das Empire, der Nordwesten und der Rest der Welt
  22. Blinde Flecken in der Unternehmensführung
  23. Edith Meyer von Kamptz (1884-1969)
  24. The modernization of West German police
  25. Akzeptanz und Nutzung der FDS-Methoden durch die Fachkräfte
  26. Vom Dozieren zum Dialog
  27. Pierre Bourdieu: Die Kraft des Rechts
  28. Jugend und Nachhaltigkeit
  29. Phase-field modelling for fatigue crack growth under laser shock peening-induced residual stresses
  30. Objekttheater begegnet digitalen Welten
  31. Impact of green and blue-green light on the growth, pigment concentration, and fatty acid unsaturation in the microalga Monoraphidium braunii
  32. The rubber brick’s story
  33. Stefan Panhans