 
     Jonathan Raper, managing director of the TransportAPI talks to Colin Sowman about the benefits open data can bring to the public transport sector.    
     
That the digital revolution would change the world, including transport, was never in doubt but the question has always been: how? Now, with the ‘Millennium Bug’ relegated to a question on quiz shows, the potential and challenges of digital technology are starting to take shape - and Jonathan Raper is in the vanguard. Raper is managing director of the open data transport information supplier 
     
His company operates in the new space created by open data to collect, verify, collate and format transport information such as live train, metro bus and tram arrivals/departures throughout the UK. While an HTML version is available for individuals to view free of charge, in most cases the data is supplied en masse through an application program interface (API) to organisations including app developers, transport providers and local authorities. The information is then used as a feed for the authority’s or company’s own travel information screens, websites, apps and other services.   
     
While as far back as 2003 the European Union first introduced regulations requiring the release of data from public funded bodies, the enthusiasm to embrace open data has varied between member states. In 2009 the open data revolution started gaining traction and the UK was at the forefront, requiring publically funded bodies to release all available data (that being data which is not already being traded commercially). The Greater London Authority was the first public body to release open data on a large scale when the Mayor of London opened the London Data Store in 2009.
     
When this movement started Raper was lecturing at the City University in London (he remains a visiting professor), and in 2010, data from the UK’s state-funded agencies began to be widely available. “Transport emerged as the single most significant stream of open data because transport information is a daily requirement for everybody,” he observes.
 When Transport for London’s arrival  and departure information became freely available and others followed,  Raper realised the opportunity and started the company. Today  TransportAPI has nine staff and some 1,200 organisations are registered  to use the service including airports, rail service providers and city  authorities. “Authorities and companies come to us and say ‘we need  information about transport in particular area or on a certain  corridor’. We collect, verify and sort the information they need and  provide an API feed [a universal format much favoured by app and website  developers] to the customer to do with as they will.  
     
“The  source is open data and when it leaves us it remains open data,” he  says, adding that this type of information is most useful when it is  disseminated as widely as possible, and as quickly as possible.
     
Transport  is one of the big winners in the open data revolution because the  travel situation changes so rapidly and travellers often start their  journeys at different times, use different modes and head for different  destinations. This means there is a demand for the data every minute of  every day.  
     
But is Raper  not simply making money from selling freely available data? “The source  material, the live data, is freely available to everybody although to  get a complete picture a user may need to search several data streams  and use different protocols. Few individuals could manage that and even  fewer would want to go to such lengths to check their commute to work.”
     
The  problem, he says, is that when the individual travel companies and  agencies set up their data and computer networks, they were designed for  internal use in a closed and secure ecosystem. Consequently, the  architecture has been designed to restrict and not facilitate the  outward passage of data and unusual and bespoke methodologies and  protocols are better from the security perspective. For these reasons  the streams of open data that are available from the various agencies  and companies often come in different or even bespoke formats. 
Organisations  wanting to obtain  (or provide) the complete travel picture in any or  all areas, will also  need to convert all the streams to a common  protocol. In addition, a  single stream may cover rail journeys across  the country or just local  bus services in one part of town and this may  or may not coincide with  what an authority or company wants.
     
   
Saving money
“Authorities   and companies, even churches and pubs, usually approach us asking if  we  can help them provide information about all travel modes in their   geographic area. We have actually saved authorities money where the   various departments have had separate subscriptions to different   services providing similar data - now, all departments can work off our   feed without any limitation,” he says. 
     
While   users in the UK benefit from the availability of open data, Raper is   acutely aware that this situation is not mirrored elsewhere -   particularly in countries with strong state-owned transport providers.   “When we enquire about obtaining the data, what we hear is: ‘we spent a   lot of money developing and operating this system, why should we give   the data away and how does that fit with the user-pays principle’?
     
“But   that misses several key points,” he says. “In a state-funded system  the  public has already paid for the data to be collected so it should  be  freely available and it also raises the question as to whether civil   servants are best positioned to decide who can best use that data.   What’s more, it must be in the transport provider’s interest that the   travelling public has good access to information about the current   travel situation because if they do, then they are more likely to use   and rely on those services. That’s why users’ comment about their travel   experience via the likes of Twitter and Facebook can be, shall we say,   highly inaccurate and incomplete. 
 
“By   releasing the data, a transport authority can  start the process  of   providing the widest and easiest access to their  own highly  accurate   data and regain much more control over the wider  information  flow.   Whereas, if they continue doing what they have been  doing,  they will   only get what they already have. At a European level  we are  seeing   reluctance on the part of the Commission and national   governments to   tackle the monoliths such as state-owned railways.
     
“If     they did open their data these countries could experience the same     ‘gold rush’ we saw in the UK with private money invested into  transport    information which brought about the likes of Citymapper and  Hailo taxi    calling service [a forerunner to Uber].”  
That’s    not to say that all the open data battles have been won in the UK.  Raper   and his team are still working on a ‘one-stop’ service that  shows the   ticket prices for the myriad of competing train and bus  companies   running the same service. “The current sites are designed to  show the   user the most direct, and often most expensive, services  rather than   highlighting that if I take the slower service on the  scenic route, the   ticket price is halved. And none of the current  operator ticket sites   certainly won’t show split ticketing [where a  single journey is paid for   by two tickets in order to take advantage  of off-peak pricing].  
 
     
He    cites Japan and Taiwan as established examples of how transport data    can help inform and improve the travelling experience whereas in  America   the dominance of the car means that apart from cities like San    Francisco, Boston and New York, the scope is much narrower.  
     
 
Maximising access
Globally,    many authorities claim they already release the data because they    supply it to a selected third party. But according to Raper, that simply    replaces a monopoly with an oligopoly - both of which exclude the    entrepreneurs needed to find new markets for the information. 
     
This brings him onto his other pet topic: Google and the other Californian-based service providers. 
     
“The    other argument I hear is when authorities say they are complying with    open data regulations because they release their data to the likes of    Google which then incorporates it in services such as the traffic  speed   overlays on Google Maps. That’s fine as far as it goes, but that  is   likely to be as far as the information spreads and again other  companies   like app and web designers may not be able to access the  data. When   signing agreements with organisations like Google or  Microsoft, I would   urge authorities and private companies to read the  supply agreement   carefully because it could prevent the data being  disclosed to other   companies. This includes the data aggregators and  the app and web   designers who can produce the bespoke information  sources travellers   find so useful.
He concludes with something of a rallying cry to transport authorities, saying: “Now is the time embrace to digital technology and all it brings with it; not to close ranks in order to fight yesterday’s battles.”
 
     
         
         
         
        



