Icelands new consitution.

Soldato
Joined
20 Aug 2010
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Recently Iceland has embarked on creating a new constitution and they have gathered 25 Citizens to do the job. Recently they just finished it and have now passed it over to parliament.

It is actually pretty impressive ( Here) not only did they use social media to help for some parts, it also includes this section which should set an example to other countries.
Anyone is free to gather and disseminate information.
Governance must be transparent and preserve documents such as minutes, and record
establish and document the mission, their origin, process and outcome. Such data can not spend unless
law.
Information and data in the possession of the government shall be available without exception and shall
legislation ensuring public access to all documents that public bodies collect or stand
power off. List of all matters and documents held by government, their origin and content, the
be publicly available.
Collection, dissemination and transmission of data, storage and delivery can only restrict
of law in democratic purposes, such as privacy, privacy, safety
is the state regulatory bodies or legal work. Authorized by law to restrict access to
working papers provided this does not go beyond what is necessary to maintain normal working
government.
Data as legitimate secrecy shall be made ​​available information on the reasons for secrecy
s limitations and latency time.
 
Recently Iceland has embarked on creating a new constitution and they have gathered 25 Citizens to do the job. Recently they just finished it and have now passed it over to parliament.

It is actually pretty impressive ( Here) not only did they use social media to help for some parts, it also includes this section which should set an example to other countries.


Does anyone understand the last one?

You know what, i dont understand 90% of that...stupid machine translation.
 
Does anyone understand the last one?

You know what, i dont understand 90% of that...stupid machine translation.

Its saying that there still is a legal idea of some data being protected, similar to the US method that EVERYTHING is public domain except things of real importance.

As a guess...
 
I can't see them getting away with sticking two fingers up at the international banking system like they did, I mean it's pretty ridiculous that the UK and Netherlands bailed out accounts in private Icelandic banks and then demanded the Icelandic tax payer repay us... it was obviously not part of the game plan them saying no.
 
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