The move to liberate government records was welcomed by the provincial organization that monitors the state of information more closely than any other, the B.C. Freedom of Information and Privacy Association.
"There is more and more information available in computer files, but the trend, unfortunately, so far has been that increasingly that information is restricted," said Richard Rosenberg, a computer-science professor who is the association's president. He started working with computers in the 1960s, and there was hope the technology would be a great tool for democracy.
Instead, governments have become more wary about releasing information, especially in B.C.
"There's this underlying feeling from bureaucrats and politicians that releasing information would come back to haunt them."
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