Agreed. I don’t think it’s a secret that “the best maps in the world, of the world, for the world” is a highly valuable asset, one which “single membership” in has annual “costs” (to influence, to guide, to shape, to steer…) of “low millions” or “seven-figure amounts.” Quite likely, even much more than that.

OSM does this currently because of the dedicated effort of volunteers (somewhere between hundreds of thousands and millions). Even if each of us considered that an entire year’s worth of effort is “worth a few dollars,” we’d be way, way, underestimating what “real costs” are of what we volunteers contribute to OSM each year.

In reality, what seems to be the “uncrackable nut” (for any one human, even as smart as Steve Coast is, he is “only one human” who had a terrific idea) is “how do we GET the ‘best map on Earth’”? Let alone pay for it? As crowdsourcing (OSM for nearly two decades) has proven “pretty darn good, though with its issues…” and AI / ML might offer an edge in the future as the tech is real enough to be making a daily (positive? the jury seems to still be out) difference. Humans are evolving, along with our tech, along with our social tinkering, along with our telecommunications and (software, big data…) infrastructure to produce these things, yet the evolution is “only underway,” it is not (yet) completed, or even beyond what might be called “a rough and ready, working 1.0.” (Some feel OSM isn’t even that, calling it “an 0.6 dinosaur”).

Overture, on its surface, seems like it is complementary to OSM, or “so they say.” I think what we have now and will going forward as this emerges / releases is “a horse race,” where it will be exciting, and there will be those who pull ahead early, those who catch up and pass in the backstretch and who knows how it will end or “who will win?”

Think of this in the broader context, everyone. And if you’re in OSM (you are if you’re reading this, quite likely), you have a part to play: both IN OSM, and as part of an observer of and perhaps even participant in “complementary” efforts.

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