3. Big data refers to datasets whose size is beyond the ability of typical
database software tools to capture, store, manage, and analyze.
This definition is intentionally subjective and incorporates a moving
definition of how big a dataset needs to be in order to be considered
big data. Big data is not define in terms of being larger than a certain
number of terabytes (thousands of gigabytes). Technology advances
over time, the size of datasets that qualify as big data will also
increase.
Also note that the definition can vary by sector, depending on what
kinds of software tools are commonly available and what sizes of
datasets are common in a particular industry. With those caveats, big
data in many sectors today will range from a few dozen terabytes to
multiple petabytes (thousands of terabytes).
BIG DATA
5. Banking
Education
Government
Commerce
Telecommunication
Health Care
Manufacturing
Transportation
Social media
Internet of Things
BIG DATA ROLE
6. "Kita harus siaga
menghadapi
ancaman kejahatan
siber, termasuk
kejahatan
penyalahgunaan
data. Data adalah
jenis kekayaan baru
bangsa kita, kini data
lebih berharga dari
minyak."
MESSAGE
7. Data is being hailed as “the new oil.” The analogy seems
appropriate given the growing amount of data being
collected, and the advances made in its gathering, storage,
manipulation and use for commercial, social and political
purposes.
Big data and its application promises to transform the way
we live and work — and will generate considerable wealth in
the process. But data’s transformative nature also raises
important questions around how the benefits are shared,
privacy, public security, openness, and the institutions that
will govern the data revolution.
The delicate interplay between these considerations means
that they have to be treated jointly, and at every level of the
governance process, from local communities to the
international arena.
DATA IS “THE NEW OIL”
8. Data Protection
Data Privacy
Data Ownership
Very BIG BIG Data
Structured vs Unstructured Data
Data Governance
CHALLENGES
11. WHO CONTROL DATA PROTECTION?
Country Law Authority
Australia Mix of Federal and
State/Territory legislation.
The Federal Privacy Act
1988 (Cth) (Privacy Act)
and its Australian Privacy
Principles (APPs) apply to
private sector entities
The Privacy Commissioner
Europian Union General Data Protection
Regulation
Enforcement by data
protection regulators, as
supervisory authorities (e.g.
Cnil in France, ICO in the
UK) and European Data
Protection Board to monitor
across EU
Singapore Personal Data Protection
Act 2012 (No. 26 of 2012)
(‘Act’) on 15 October 2012.
Personal Data Protection
Commission