* [examples/openspending] - openspending v0.2 * [examples/openspending][m] - fix build * [examples/openspending][xs] - fix build * [examples/openspending][xs] - add prebuild step * [examples/openspending][m] - fix requested by demenech * [examples/openspending][sm] - remove links + fix bug
37 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
37 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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section: about
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lead: true
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title: Our funders
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authors:
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- Neil Ashton
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---
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OpenSpending is a community-driven project, but we would not be able to run it without the generous support of these organizations:
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#### 4IP
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<img src="http://blog.openspending.org/files/2013/09/4ip-300x79.jpg" alt="4ip" width="300" height="79" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1056" />
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It was thanks to Channel 4's Information Program that [Where Does My Money Go?](http://wheredoesmymoneygo.org/) was born. 'Where Does My Money Go?' was the original version of OpenSpending for the United Kingdom and has inspired many international versions of the site.
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#### Open Society Foundations
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<img src="http://blog.openspending.org/files/2013/09/osf-300x70.jpg" alt="Basic CMYK" width="300" height="70" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1057" />
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The Open Society Foundations support community building work around Open Spending Data. With this project we aim to help more groups and individuals around the world to use and work with spending data more effectively to do the things they care about – whether this is investigative journalism, evidence based policy-making, political campaigning, budgeting or creating new useful applications and services.
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In particular, we would like to document and spread best practices in the legal and technical aspects of reusing public information, and enabling re-use and better collaboration around this material.
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Read [the announce post]( http://blog.openspending.org/2012/01/12/civil-society-and-spending-data-who-is-mapping-the-money/) for more information.
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#### Knight Foundation
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<img src="http://blog.openspending.org/files/2013/09/kf-300x71.png" alt="kf" width="300" height="71" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1058" />
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The Knight Foundation support the development of the [Spending Stories](http://blog.okfn.org/2011/06/22/spending-stories-is-a-winner-of-the-knight-news-challenge/) project. Spending Stories is a tool designed to speed up fact checking around spending data, helping journalists to connect raw data with their stories and build context around data with visualisations and auxilliary information.
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#### Omidyar Network
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<img src="http://blog.openspending.org/files/2013/09/on-300x100.jpg" alt="on" width="300" height="100" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1059" />
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The Omidyar Network funded the research behind the report 'Technology for Transparent and Accountable Public Finance', which was presented at the Global Initiative for Fiscal Transparency meeting in Brasilia in April 2012.
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