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COVID-19 & GCC Data Portals

GCC countries have invested significant resources in developing national data portals, but most of these portals have yet to publish a single dataset relating to the biggest global pandemic of our lifetimes, COVID-19. Instead of utilising their familiar and tested platforms for releasing data, GCC countries launched independent dashboards for making COVID-19 data available to the public. The issue with this approach is that these new dashboards fail to comply with the most basic principles of open data. This has limited the ability of members of public to use this data in ways that would otherwise have contributed to managing the crisis.

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COVID-19 and Open Data

The Omani government has reacted swiftly to the COVID-19 pandemic and has shared with the public substantial amounts of data in regard to the cases, recoveries, deaths, and vaccinations. However, regrettably, the COVID data published by the Omani government does not comply with the majority of principles of open data, and this limits the benefits and utility of this data.

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Datasets

International Agreements

Oman has signed a significant number of international agreements with countries and international organisations on a variety of matters ranging from taxation and investment, to human rights and the environment. This dataset provides a list of the international agreements that Oman has ratified by royal decree from the year 1974 onwards. The dataset includes the title of the agreement, details of the ratification royal decree, the date of signature, the classification, the counter-party, and the subject.

Dataset Description

SourceThis dataset is based on the open data published on Duwaly.gov.om, and later independently updated from the data published on Qanoon.om.
Time period covered1974 to 2021.
Frequency of updateYearly

Metadata

FieldDescription
CodeSerial code to identify the treaty.
Title – ARThe title of the treaty in Arabic.
Title – ENThe title of the treaty in English.
Royal Decree NoThe royal decree number in the format of YYYY-NNNN where YYYY is the year in a four-digit format and NNNN is the sequence number in a four-digit format.
Royal Decree DateThe date on which the royal decree was issued in the format YYYY-MM-DD.
Signing DateThe date on which the treaty was signed in the format YYYY-MM-DD. This usually is only available for bilateral treaties.
ClassificationThe classification of a treaty as bilateral, closed multilateral, or open multilateral. Bilateral treaties are signed between two states. Closed multilateral treaties are treaties signed by more than two states and open only to a select group of states. Open multilateral treaties are treaties that are open for any state to join.
Counter-partyThe counter-party to a treaty. This applies only to bilateral treaties.
SubjectThe subject of a treaty. This applies only to bilateral treaties.

Data

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New Omani Government Policy on the Use of Artificial Intelligence

Today, the Ministry of Transport, Communications, and Information Technology issued a new policy on government use of AI technology. Similar to other policies issued by the MTCIT, this document is not legally binding it is essentially a form of instructions and recommendations for government entities.

The policy appears to have been finalised last June and is addressed to government entities only. It sets out six very high level principles for the use of AI: inclusiveness, human-centrism, accountability, fairness, transparency, and safety.

The key concrete policy provisions include:

  • A requirement to undertake a risk assessment in regard to the use of AI (but no details as to when such a risk assessment should be done, if it is a one-off requirement or a periodic requirement).
  • A requirement to ensure that no AI bias takes place and disclose to those affected by the AI system of the existence of such a system and the impact it may have on them.
  • A requirement to obtain prior approval of those affected by the AI system.

The policy also briefly mentions a requirement to comply with open data policies.

You can read the Arabic version of the policy on this link.

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Datasets

COVID-19

This dataset covers the key COVID-19 corona virus data, such as cases, recoveries, deaths, and hospitalisation, as published by the official Omani government COVID-19 twitter account.

Dataset Description

SourceOmanvsCOVID19 Twitter account.
Time period covered15 March 2021 to date.
Frequency of updateWeekly.

Metadata

FieldDescription
DateThe date on which the COVID-19 data was reported in the format YYYY-MM-DD.
New CasesThe number of newly confirmed individuals infected with COVID-19.
New Cases -OmaniThe number of newly confirmed individuals of Omani nationality infected with COVID-19.
New Cases – non-OmaniThe number of newly confirmed individuals of non-Omani nationality infected with COVID-19.
Total Reported CasesThe number of confirmed COVID-19 cases since reporting started.
New TestsThe total number of new COVID-19 tests that have been carried out.
Total TestsThe total number of COVID-19 tests since the reporting of tests started.
New DeathsThe total number of newly confirmed COVID-19 deaths.
Total DeathsThe total number of COVID-19 deaths since reporting started.
New RecoveriesThe number of newly recovered individuals infected with COVID-19.
Total RecoveriesThe total number of total recoveries of individuals infected with COVID-19 since reporting started.
New AdmissionsThe number of COVID-19 patients newly admitted to a hospital within the last 24 hours.
Current AdmissionThe total number of COVID-19 patients currently in admission at a hospital.
Current ICU AdmissionThe number of COVID-19 patients admitted in an intensive care unit at a hospital.
SourceA link to the tweet publishing the data for the relevant date.

Simplified Dataset

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Visualisation

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Full Dataset

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Notes

The dataset has gaps due to the government’s decision at a later stage to reduce the amount of information released and to suspend reporting on weekends and national holidays. You can read our blog post on this issue here.

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Open Data Journalism in Oman

Journalism has seen an increasingly growing trend of using data to produce stories, enhance reporting, and enable cross-checking. The trend is designed to increase the accuracy of reporting and ultimately win over the public’s trust. Coined as “data journalism”, this newer form of news reporting involves broad practices from using big data or open data in order to uncover stories, to using analytics and coding in order to identify relationships and predict future trends.

Supported by the government’s open data efforts, Oman is riding the data journalism wave and witnessing a paradigm shift in its local journalism. This is seen from young independent journalist’s shift away from conservative reporting that relies on publishing official statements towards investigative reporting. With this new approach, independent journalists go on fact-finding missions relying on open data sources to explain government decisions and to provide its readership with greater context in a simple and digestible manner.

Atheer and WAF are two independent Omani news outlets that have written investigative pieces using what are effectively open datasets. In one piece, Atheer examined the relationship between the newly established Private Office and the Diwan of Royal Court by analysing all royal decrees issued from the 1970s onwards that either determined or modified the mandate of the Diwan of Royal Court. The research for this piece was conducted using Qanoon.om, an independent website for publishing royal decrees in open format. Qanoon.om relies on data from the official website of the Ministry of Justice and Legal Affairs which, although does not publish its data in technically open format, does make them available free of charge. The piece by Atheer would not have been possible without the government data published by the Ministry of Justice and Legal Affairs, and the government data proved to be useful despite not satisfying the technical standards for open data. In another piece, WAF examined the expansion in government-owned companies in the former five-year plan by analysing company data from the website of the Ministry of Commerce, Industry, and Investment Promotion and the website of Muscat Clearing and Depository and then commenting on this government trend.

Although we have yet to see sophisticated forms of data journalism in Oman that rely on analytics or other advanced data methods, open data journalism has proved to be a significant enabler of the Omani government’s primary vision – the development of an empowered knowledge-based society. Wider adoption of open data through the release of more datasets that are free of charge and in easily processable formats would no doubt continue to directly contribute to a richer journalism industry.

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Legislation Data in Oman

Legislation might not be an obvious topic to explore from an open data perspective, but it is regularly considered by international open data indicators as a key dataset that governments should prioritize publishing on the internet in a manner that complies with open data principles. Legislation is one of the most important pieces of data that the government generates and publishes as having access to the law is one of the most fundamental rights in all societies and legal systems.

The government of Oman has made significant efforts in publishing its legislation on the internet and laws can be downloaded free of charge from the website of the Ministry of Justice of Legal Affairs. In fact, the government has recently stopped publishing the Official Gazette (the publication in which laws are made available to the public) in hardcopy format and makes it available exclusively as a free digital download.

From an open data perspective, legislation in Oman is uniquely automatically deemed legally open because the Omani copyright law excludes legislation from copyright protection and makes it part of the public domain. This allows anyone to copy it, re-utilise it, and sell it without the need to seek the permission of the government or pay them any fees.

Legislation is also published systematically and in a timely manner on the internet, making this vital government dataset very accessible and useful to society. However, legislation published by the government still does not comply with certain technical aspects of the principles of open data especially in regard to machine-readability and structure. In particular, legislation is usually published as PDFs that do not easily allow users to copy the content from them, that are difficult to search, and that are unavailable for download in bulk, all of which make this data inaccessible and undiscoverable.

Notwithstanding the technical shortcomings of the legislation data that the government publishes, the fact that the government releases this data on the internet without copyright restrictions has enabled both civil society and the private sector to utilise the data and fill the usability gaps left by the government. This can be seen on civil society projects such as Qanoon.om (a project I co-founded) and Oman Legal Network, as well as private sector projects such as Mohamoon, all of which build on the data openly made available by the government to create more usable solutions for accessing the law.

The openness of legislation data in Oman and the efforts of the government in making the contents of the Official Gazette available in a timely manner on the internet set an example for publishers of other types of government data to release their data openly. This should be celebrated as a success story in releasing government data in Oman.

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New Omani Cloud Computing Policy Supports Open Data

The Ministry of Transport, Communications, and Information Technology issued, at the beginning of June 2021, a new policy on cloud computing. The objective of this policy is to regulate the government’s use of cloud computing services by setting classification, security, and administrative requirements.

From an open data perspective, this policy positively encourages the release of open data as it recognises data as a strategic state asset and requires government entities to establish a distinct category of open/public data in addition to the four classifications set out in the classification law.

You can view the Arabic version of the policy at this link.

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ODO Open Data Principles

This document sets out seven key principles of open data, tackling both the technical and legal aspects of open data. The principles are inspired by the 8 principles originally developed in 2007 by the Open Government Working Group in Sebastopol, California. The objectives of this document is to assist open data publishers in ensuring the data they publish is truly useful for members of the public. 

Principle 1: Data Must be Complete

Open data must be published in complete form. This simply means the dataset must make sense and does not include any incomplete fields or missing information. Open data must also be accompanied by metadata. Metadata is information that puts a particular dataset into context by setting out descriptive details such as the data owner, method of collection, frequency of update, geographic coverage, and temporal coverage. 

Principle 2: Data Release Must be Timely

Open data must have some relevance to the period during which it is published. It should also be current and up-to-date. Publication of historical data is encouraged where that dataset is relevant today; for example, to uncover data trends. Data publishers should strive to share data in real-time to the maximum extent possible. 

Principle 3: The Data Source Must Be Primary and Reliable 

Open data must be published by its primary source. This does not necessarily mean that open data may only be published by the primary collector, although it does mean that the data must be published by an entity that has overall responsibility for the dataset.  In other words, a data user should be able to trace back the original source of the data. It should provide users with the confidence that the data is reliable or authoritative. Whatever data is published as open data should be permanently discoverable and not made available for a temporary period only. 

Principle 4: Data Must be Raw

Open data must be made available in its rawest form. This means that data should be published in the form that it was collected. Data which has been grouped, manipulated, or previously used for a different purpose are nonconforming to this principle. 

Principle 5: Data Must Be Technically Reusable 

Open data must be published in digital form and in machine-readable format which allows for automated processing (for example: CSV, XLSX, JSON, or XML). Open data should also be structured in a predefined structure that enables the data to be stored, analysed, and processed easily (for example, tabular format). Finally for open data to be technically reusable, it must also be published in a technological format which ‘places no restrictions, monetary or otherwise, upon its use‘ or which, at the very least, ‘can be processed with at least one free/libre/open-source software tool‘ (for example: XLS and XLSX). In other words, this data must be published in open format.

Principle 6: Data Must Be Legally Reusable

Open data must be legally reusable. This means that users should be allowed to use open data freely and beyond its original intended purposes, for both commercial and non-commercial purposes. This is typically achieved by adopting the Open Government Licence or another widely accepted open licence such as those of the Creative Commons.

Principle 7: Data Must Be Accessible and Discoverable

Data providers must ensure that any open data is easily discoverable in that they may be easily accessed online. Access to Open Data must also be free of charge and available for download in bulk. Discriminatory restrictions, such as making data available only to nationals or residents, are not permissible.

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Datasets

Coordinates of Omani Forts

This dataset covers the coordinates of major historic forts and castles in the Sultanate of Oman.

Dataset Description

SourceIndependently collected by ODO.

Metadata

FieldDescription
NameThe name of the fort or castle.
CityThe city in which the fort or castle is located.
CoordinatesThe latitude and longitude coordinates in decimal degrees.

Data

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Notes

The Sultanate of Oman is home to a large number of forts and castles, the majority of which are open to the public. This dataset covers the data for some of these forts and castles. This is a reference dataset that does not have a specific update frequency, but we intend to expand it over time.