Our paper presentation at the International Conference on e-Democracy and Open Government, Krems, Austria, may 2013
In Peter Parycek & Noella Edelmann (Eds.), CeDEM13: Proceedings of the International Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government (pp. 19-30). Krems: Edition Donau- Universität Krems.
Our paper presentation at the International Conference on e-Democracy and Open Government, Krems, Austria, may 2013
In Peter Parycek & Noella Edelmann (Eds.), CeDEM13: Proceedings of the International Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government (pp. 19-30). Krems: Edition Donau- Universität Krems.
ICT and Environmental Regulation in the Developing World: Inequalities in Ins...Rónán Kennedy
SCRIPT Centre Workshop on 'ICT in a changing climate: ICT for environmental regulation as a global justice and development issue', University of Edinburgh, June 2015
International Journal of Ad hoc, Sensor & Ubiquitous Computing (IJASUC) ijasuc
International Journal of Ad hoc, sensor & Ubiquitous Computing (IJASUC) is a bi monthly open access peer-reviewed journal provides excellent international forum for sharing knowledge and results in theory, methodology and applications of Ad Hoc & Ubiquitous computing. Current information age is witnessing a dramatic use of digital and electronic devices in the workplace and beyond. Ubiquitous Computing presents a rather arduous requirement of robustness, reliability and availability to the end user. Ad hoc, Sensor & Ubiquitous computing has received a significant and sustained research interest in terms of designing and deploying large scale and high performance computational applications in real life.
20190423 PRiSE model to tackle data protection impact assessments and data pr...Brussels Legal Hackers
The event was on 23 April 2019. The speaker was Pierre Dewitte (CITIP, KULeuven, iMEC). The event was hosted in the office of TimeLex, a niche law office with expertise a.o. in data protection.
Pierre Dewitte explained the PRiSE model to tackle the issues of risk assessments, data protection impact assessments, data protection by design, and documentation of all of that.
The keynote, which triggered a lot of questions and interactive discussion amongst the attendees, looks at the interaction (1) between software engineers and lawyers (a simplified universe for software development teams) and (2) between design scientists and lawyers (a simplified universe of social sciences).
In the first interaction, the PRiSE model aims to support three steps
1) description (input)
2) analysis (output)
3) documentation
On the second interaction, due to time constraints (too lively a discussion, if there is such a thing), the keynote pointed out some point of attention.
In any case the conclusion is that data protection is per se interdisciplinary, which is why it is so interesting.
Environmental Protection Through E-Regulation: Critical and Empirical Perspec...Rónán Kennedy
Sometimes the most commonplace and uninteresting tools demand close attention because their mundane nature means that their role is misunderstood. The use of computer technology by government – specifically, by environmental regulators – is one such instance. Information and communications technology (ICT) is increasingly deployed in bureaucratic and regulatory processes throughout the developed world; as in commerce and industry, software code and databases are becoming the invisible ‘glue’ that interconnects the various actors in the regulatory system and weaves an invisible web of control between decision-makers, regulated entities and ordinary citizens. Nonetheless, this topic has received only disconnected academic attention, perhaps because there is little that seems intrinsically interesting about a database.
The issues which ICT raises are not always obvious but nonetheless significant if we are to make the best use of these new tools without unwittingly sacrificing important principles. There is now a substantial body of literature on regulation and ICT. However, this focuses on either ‘information’ or ‘communications’, rarely on both together or on the use of ICT for regulation rather than something to be regulated. There are few theoretical or practical perspectives on the role of ICT in environmental regulation. This paper applies both in combination, developing a values-based, analytical and empirically grounded framework in order to contextualise the use of ICT as a regulatory tool.
The ever-increasing deployment of ICT in homes and offices, the built environment and the world at large creates significant opportunities for achieving better environmental outcomes but this new and poorly-understood development also raises questions about the proper operation of the rule of law by an increasingly computerised state. This research explores how the widespread implementation of ICT is altering power relationships in the system of environmental regulation. It asks to what extent this new capability of large-scale information capture leads to more or less control on the part of regulators, whether existing balances and imbalances of power are altered by these new tools (even when they are seen as neutral) and what happens when the ‘glue’ hardens and installed technology makes policy change difficult.
The paper critically reviews the operation of the rule of law in digitised government. It combines theoretical perspectives from sociology, chiefly actor-network theory, with insights from semi-structured interviews with staff in regulatory agencies, non-governmental agencies and regulated entities, to build a thematic network model of how the use of ICT for information-gathering, as a means of control and as a conduit for communications is perceived by practitioners of environmental regulation. It uses this to sketch the contours of a new field of study, ‘e-regulation’, centred around the core values of the
Our paper presentation at the International Conference on e-Democracy and Open Government, Krems, Austria, may 2014.
In Peter Parycek & Noella Edelmann (Eds.), CeDEM14: Proceedings of the International Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government (pp. 283-294). Krems: Edition Donau- Universität Krems.
The seminar makes an approach to the concept of e-Readiness from the point of view of capacitation and digital literacy.
Different kinds or steps of digital literacy are presented and, then, the concept of e-Readiness is questioned, making it evolve towards the concept of e-Awareness.
The International journal of Multimedia & Its Applications (IJMA) is a bi monthly open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles which contribute new results in all areas of the Multimedia & its applications. The journal focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Multimedia and its applications. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on understanding recent developments this arena, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
D. Meiländer, S. Gorlatch, C. Cappiello,V. Mazza, R. Kazhamiakin, and A. Buc...ServiceWave 2010
D. Meiländer, S. Gorlatch, C. Cappiello,V. Mazza, R. Kazhamiakin, and A. Bucchiarone: Using a Lifecycle Model for Adaptable Interactive Distributed Applications
ICT and Environmental Regulation in the Developing World: Inequalities in Ins...Rónán Kennedy
SCRIPT Centre Workshop on 'ICT in a changing climate: ICT for environmental regulation as a global justice and development issue', University of Edinburgh, June 2015
International Journal of Ad hoc, Sensor & Ubiquitous Computing (IJASUC) ijasuc
International Journal of Ad hoc, sensor & Ubiquitous Computing (IJASUC) is a bi monthly open access peer-reviewed journal provides excellent international forum for sharing knowledge and results in theory, methodology and applications of Ad Hoc & Ubiquitous computing. Current information age is witnessing a dramatic use of digital and electronic devices in the workplace and beyond. Ubiquitous Computing presents a rather arduous requirement of robustness, reliability and availability to the end user. Ad hoc, Sensor & Ubiquitous computing has received a significant and sustained research interest in terms of designing and deploying large scale and high performance computational applications in real life.
20190423 PRiSE model to tackle data protection impact assessments and data pr...Brussels Legal Hackers
The event was on 23 April 2019. The speaker was Pierre Dewitte (CITIP, KULeuven, iMEC). The event was hosted in the office of TimeLex, a niche law office with expertise a.o. in data protection.
Pierre Dewitte explained the PRiSE model to tackle the issues of risk assessments, data protection impact assessments, data protection by design, and documentation of all of that.
The keynote, which triggered a lot of questions and interactive discussion amongst the attendees, looks at the interaction (1) between software engineers and lawyers (a simplified universe for software development teams) and (2) between design scientists and lawyers (a simplified universe of social sciences).
In the first interaction, the PRiSE model aims to support three steps
1) description (input)
2) analysis (output)
3) documentation
On the second interaction, due to time constraints (too lively a discussion, if there is such a thing), the keynote pointed out some point of attention.
In any case the conclusion is that data protection is per se interdisciplinary, which is why it is so interesting.
Environmental Protection Through E-Regulation: Critical and Empirical Perspec...Rónán Kennedy
Sometimes the most commonplace and uninteresting tools demand close attention because their mundane nature means that their role is misunderstood. The use of computer technology by government – specifically, by environmental regulators – is one such instance. Information and communications technology (ICT) is increasingly deployed in bureaucratic and regulatory processes throughout the developed world; as in commerce and industry, software code and databases are becoming the invisible ‘glue’ that interconnects the various actors in the regulatory system and weaves an invisible web of control between decision-makers, regulated entities and ordinary citizens. Nonetheless, this topic has received only disconnected academic attention, perhaps because there is little that seems intrinsically interesting about a database.
The issues which ICT raises are not always obvious but nonetheless significant if we are to make the best use of these new tools without unwittingly sacrificing important principles. There is now a substantial body of literature on regulation and ICT. However, this focuses on either ‘information’ or ‘communications’, rarely on both together or on the use of ICT for regulation rather than something to be regulated. There are few theoretical or practical perspectives on the role of ICT in environmental regulation. This paper applies both in combination, developing a values-based, analytical and empirically grounded framework in order to contextualise the use of ICT as a regulatory tool.
The ever-increasing deployment of ICT in homes and offices, the built environment and the world at large creates significant opportunities for achieving better environmental outcomes but this new and poorly-understood development also raises questions about the proper operation of the rule of law by an increasingly computerised state. This research explores how the widespread implementation of ICT is altering power relationships in the system of environmental regulation. It asks to what extent this new capability of large-scale information capture leads to more or less control on the part of regulators, whether existing balances and imbalances of power are altered by these new tools (even when they are seen as neutral) and what happens when the ‘glue’ hardens and installed technology makes policy change difficult.
The paper critically reviews the operation of the rule of law in digitised government. It combines theoretical perspectives from sociology, chiefly actor-network theory, with insights from semi-structured interviews with staff in regulatory agencies, non-governmental agencies and regulated entities, to build a thematic network model of how the use of ICT for information-gathering, as a means of control and as a conduit for communications is perceived by practitioners of environmental regulation. It uses this to sketch the contours of a new field of study, ‘e-regulation’, centred around the core values of the
Our paper presentation at the International Conference on e-Democracy and Open Government, Krems, Austria, may 2014.
In Peter Parycek & Noella Edelmann (Eds.), CeDEM14: Proceedings of the International Conference for E-Democracy and Open Government (pp. 283-294). Krems: Edition Donau- Universität Krems.
The seminar makes an approach to the concept of e-Readiness from the point of view of capacitation and digital literacy.
Different kinds or steps of digital literacy are presented and, then, the concept of e-Readiness is questioned, making it evolve towards the concept of e-Awareness.
The International journal of Multimedia & Its Applications (IJMA) is a bi monthly open access peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles which contribute new results in all areas of the Multimedia & its applications. The journal focuses on all technical and practical aspects of Multimedia and its applications. The goal of this journal is to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on understanding recent developments this arena, and establishing new collaborations in these areas.
D. Meiländer, S. Gorlatch, C. Cappiello,V. Mazza, R. Kazhamiakin, and A. Buc...ServiceWave 2010
D. Meiländer, S. Gorlatch, C. Cappiello,V. Mazza, R. Kazhamiakin, and A. Bucchiarone: Using a Lifecycle Model for Adaptable Interactive Distributed Applications
20090327 Software Engineering -- What's in it for me?Arian Zwegers
Presentation about the opportunities for funding in Software and Services, esp in the FP7 ICT Work Programme, ITEA2, and Artemis, for the CSMR conference, Kaiserslautern (Germany), 27 March 2009
"Towards Value-Centric Big Data" e-SIDES Workshop - Slide-decke-SIDES.eu
This is the slide-deck of the workshop held at the BDV Meet-UP on June 27, 2019 in Riga, titled "Towards Value-Centric Big Data". It includes the presentations given by the speakers.
Intervención Olavi Luotonen. Comisión europea. Scientific Officer, New Infrastucture Paradigms and Experimental Facilities en las Primeras Jornadas de Centros de Conocimiento. Citilab Cornellà #citilab #joceco
Virtualisation taking place – Martin BrynskovMartin Brynskov
How understanding virtualisation, the computing continuum and communities of practice is essential for making the right investments in research, innovation and deployment. A global perspective from Europe. By Martin Brynskov https://www.linkedin.com/in/brynskov/
20090616 Investing in Software & Services ResearchArian Zwegers
Presentation about why the European Community funds research in ICT and about the opportunities for funding in Software and Services in the FP7 ICT Work Programme, for the SSAIE Summer School, Heraklion (Greece), 16 June 2009
Presentation on ICT trends in developments and what this means for the agri-food business, focussing on the FIspace platform. The presentation was part of the mastercourse Hortibusiness in which about 20 entrepreneurs from the horticultural business are participating.
Presentation given by Nikolay Tcholtev, Fraunhofer Fokus, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Slides from Mr. Georgios Tselentis, EC, DG CONNECT, Net Futures, Experimental Platforms.
Presented at CSC 2016, session2: Open Session on IoT Large Scale Pilots for Reference Zones in EU cities.
L'economia europea dei dati. Politiche europee e opportunità di finanziamento...Data Driven Innovation
L'economia europea dei dati: soluzioni politiche e giuridiche per realizzare un'economia dei dati a livello di Unione Europea, nell'ambito della strategia per il mercato unico digitale. La consultazione pubblica 'Building the European Data Economy'. Il paternariato pubblico privato (PPP) Big Data Value ed opportunità di finanziamento in Horizon 2020. L'incubatore Data Pitch: opportunità per Start-up e Piccole e Medie Imprese.
Mário Campolargo - Services and clouds as cornerstones of the Digital AgendaServiceWave 2010
Mário Campolargo - Services and clouds as cornerstones of the Digital Agenda
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Dr. Thierry Priol, INRIA, ServiceWave General Chair - Opening Welcome (edit)
Tags Description Dr. Thierry Priol, INRIA, ServiceWave General Chair - Opening Welcome Service Wave 2010 - Tuesday Dec 14th 2010
The Business Service Representation Language - Ghose ServiceWave 2010
The Business Service Representation Language
A.K. Ghose1 L.S. Le1 K. Hoesch-Klohe1 E. Morrison1
1Decision Systems Lab
School of Computer Science and Software Engineering
University of Wollongong
A
Service Modelling and Representation Techniques ServiceWave 2010
Service Modelling and Representation Techniques - a holistic Enterprise Architecture perspective on using and influencing the emerging standards of VDM, USDL and SoaML
Dr. Arne-Jørgen Berre
SINTEF
Networked Systems and Services
ServiceWave Conference 2010 -FIA
Future Internet Conference week 2010 Ghent
13 december 2010
Rainer Zimmermann (European Commission): The role of the European Commission in Software and Services research
1. The role of the European Commission in Software and Services research Rainer Zimmermann European Commission Information Society and Media Directorate General HoU Software & Service Architectures and Infrastructures
2. What is this presentation about? Vision the vision of the European Commission for software and services Trends what we see in today’s ICT and in ICT research The next step the Workprogramme 2011-2012 and ICT call 8 Looking forward A sneak preview at Framework Programme 8
3. European services? Our vision Everything as a Service 2026 Research should help the development of a new generation of European services INTERNET 1986 1996 2010
5. Current developments Projects addressing challenges Coordination and Support Actions HOLA!, MobiWebApp, MOSQUITO, SEQUOIA, SOFI, SPRERS Service Front-Ends SOCIETIES , I2Web, OMELETTE, Serenoa, SocIoS WAX , SRT-15, PLAY, Indenica Internet of Services Advanced Software Engineering Service coordination CHOReOS , ACSI Open source development ALERT Maintenance FastFix Migration to clouds REMICS Testing FITTEST Service Platforms Platform as a Service 4CaaST , CumuloNimbo, Cloud4SOA Infrastructure as a Service VISION Cloud, OPTIMIS, CONTRAIL , Cloud-TM, mOSAIC Cloud Computing
6.
7.
8. Cloud strategy = Policy + Research Interoperability & standards European Interoperability Framework D.A. actions 21-27 Privacy D.A. action 35 revision of EU privacy framework Security D.A. actions 28-41 modernized ENISA S calability, Data and application portability, Cross-platform execution, Interoperability, Data protection, Energy efficiency, Open source software stack Policy areas (Digital Agenda) Research (Workprogramme) Action 21: Propose legislation on ICT interoperability Action 35: Guidance on implementation of Telecoms rules on privacy Action 28: Reinforced Network and Information Security Policy
9. Looking a bit further FP8 Starting 2014 Link to grand European challenges Based on the Digital Agenda Open innovation Better management and simpler administration Issue: small and scattered projects => small results and no overall direction Two complementary approaches Open light and fast Roadmap based research
10. Looking a bit further Open light and fast Bottom-up innovation driven SME friendly attractive for young researchers explorative research Roadmap based research Top-down structured, industry participation mid term goals from research to commercialization harnessing innovation to social needs
11. Looking a bit further Some objectives (from the Digital Agenda) “ greater focus on demand-and user-driven partnerships ” “ leverage more private investment ” “ structural shift to less resource-intensive products and services” “ continue to invest in high-risk research ” “ industry-led initiatives for open innovation ” “ standards and open platforms for new products and services”
12. For more information FP7 http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/ Software & Service Architectures and Infrastructures http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/ssai/ Future Internet http://ec.europa.eu/foi http://www.future-internet.eu/ E-mail [email_address]
Editor's Notes
EC vision about the future of IT: a new generation of European services which are innovative, high added value, and in line with EU values and policies EC role: facilitate the development of this new generation of European services what about 2016, 2026? Internet as key enabler for the future services - 20 years of public Internet transformed our way of working, living and creating - It is just the start. - How to ride the next 20 years of new services and applications? - Below you see the network, from Arpanet to Internet to Future Internet. As it is it can not releash the innovation potential of Services and Applications. - the network is the necessary basis, and has to be changed dramatically (capacity, scalability, architecture). - (Note that the technical choices may set the rules of business, the position of users (empowered or not), requires, impact or make outdated some the policies .) already said in previous slide now
Trends we see in everyday IT and in our research projects Cloud is becoming the engine of Internet: most of our research projects are related in some way to clouds Mobile applications are mainstream and growing a lot faster than desktop apps Social networks are today’s boom and here to stay Serious gaming a new trend with enormous possibilities And all these go together: e.g. serious games based on social networks, played by mobile users, powered by cloud. These trends create challenges: Clouds needs standards, privacy, security Social and mobile apps need robust service platforms Games needs research on service front-ends All need robust software engineering
Let’s see how our projects (Call 5) address these challenges Bold = IPs Standard font = STREPs
WP 2011-2012 is simplified and focused towards future challenges
The workprogramme is open towards ALL technologies in the selected fields: Cloud computing Internet of services Advanced software engineering And all the “interesting things” are happening in the Internet today! The technologies mentioned here are just examples, but the WP does not pose limitations (we want bright ideas even if not about subjects explicitly mentioned in the WP !!!)
Cloud computing is central in future internet. Cloud strategy in EC has two main dimensions: policy and research/innovation These strategies are complementary: research is needed to have technical means to actually apply a policy (e.g. in privacy) In this slides only some policies are shown. Other D.A. actions are also important
FP8: two schemes to address both long-term “blue sky” research and more innovation oriented research The issue in FP7 is the proliferation of small projects with high administrative costs and no common direction => unsatisfactory results The 2 complementary schemes of FP8 are meant to address this issue
Differences between the 2 schemes
FP8 will be in sync with the overall objectives defined by the DA and with general EU policies