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Why isn't there a Waze-Fork with OSM-Data?

English телендә kerosin13 September 2011 баҫылып сыҡты.

I understand that Waze has interests to build their own map-data to sell them, but since waze is open-source I ask myself why there isn't a waze fork out yet.

Has this circumstance technical reasons or are there not enough developers that are interested in a project like that? I would be interested in explanations or comments :)
Thanks in advance!

Урын University South, Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California, 94301, United States
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stephan75тарафынан13 September 2011 cәғәт 17:19көндө ҡаралған

you can find some info at the OSM wiki ... search there for "waze", for example at osm.wiki/GSoC_Project_Ideas_2010 -> Waze

sounds like license issues.

Sanderd17тарафынан13 September 2011 cәғәт 18:02көндө ҡаралған

There is a license issue for waze to use OSM data.

But if waze is open source, OSM could use Waze and contribute back to OSM, this would solve the license issue. But I never heard waze was open source.

Anyway, automated contributions are difficult. Waze is specialised in traffic info and driving speeds. These are two things where OSM is bad at. OSM is mainly for static features.

And for static features, the most automated you can get with OSM is automatic uploading of GPX files.

BTW, only the client code of Waze is open source, not the routing engine or the data query engine.

jutezakтарафынан13 September 2011 cәғәт 20:09көндө ҡаралған

An OSM based router could also refine house numbers by noting the request including number, checking where the person ends up, and guessing that must be the correct location. But how can the initial guess be made acceptable? How can the GPS stay on until the person enters the destination?

kerosinтарафынан14 September 2011 cәғәт 12:19көндө ҡаралған

ah, i just saw this page http://www.waze.com/wiki/index.php/Source_code and thought the whole thing is open source. so their servers and api are proprietary? i mean there is a routing engine with data query engine by cloudmade. but the question is if it's hard to implement new data-sources to the waze-app or if it might be easier to develop a new app from scratch.

contributing gpx would proably the biggest benefit for the osm-community. i wasn't talking about automated contributions to osm and things like traffic info or average driving speed statistics (if wazes servers are not open) could be stored to a separate database (at best free license aswell).

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