No. The data are free, but people will have to buy the application created by using the open data. The application, for instance, might be to find a parking spot without risking a parking ticket. This type of application could be sold in an application store which would have been developed by others, who would have worked on that. Those people would not be reselling data; they are selling a service. If you want to get to a certain place, an application could tell you where parking is available and where you could park on the street. The application could tell you, in real time, where available parking meters are located and whether there are parking spots left in major parking lots. So with the help of this application, you will be able to find out where you can park your car. People might be willing to pay $1 or $2 for this type of application. The city would not have developed the application, nor paid for it; this application would have been designed by the private sector.
On May 13th, 2014. See this statement in context.