The document discusses the history and development of open data in Flanders, Belgium from 2010 to the present. It outlines the key steps taken, including establishing open data as the norm for the Flemish government in 2011, developing an action plan and platform from 2012-2013, and releasing business data through a central repository. It acknowledges ongoing challenges around data quality, licensing, privacy, cooperation among actors, and securing necessary budgets. Finally, it emphasizes future plans to improve quality, reliability of services, and focus on user communities through open access and mobility applications.
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In business, we need to make sure we are ahead of the
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Master Data in the Cloud: 5 Security FundamentalsSarah Fane
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Advertisers are collecting as much data as possible in order to sell finely targeted audiences to corporations. Privacy advocates are trying to wake up the populace to the continuous loss of civil liberties. Marketers are just trying to use the best tools to sell more stuff without alienating the public. Aurélie offers up a global view privacy rules and regulations to highlight how the upcoming European Union Personal Data Protection Regulation will influence digital analytics around the world. Then David identifies key data collection and usage issues and discusses ways to obtain the data we need while maintaining the trust and confidence of those we need to reach.
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But what does this really imply?
Your role as a company collecting, processing and retargeting data is one thing.
The tools you use, their Terms and Conditions and the surrounding processes yet another.
Follow this session if you make sure that within this chain of data responsibility you are not the weak link.
Data privacy awareness is on the rise. Users become more and more concerned with how online service providers collect and protect their personal information. And so should you. Discover how to balance the risks and benefits of collecting data in the age of customer centricity.
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Almost 5 years into GDPR enforcement, the courts and the supervisory authorities have peddled through quite some decisions and more are expected while this description is being written.
More importantly, privacy legislations globally continue to evolve, some at state levels while entire continents are taking a stance, enclosing positions on Competition, obligations for Platforms, also called Gatekeepers, and uses of ADM, ML or even AI. This presentation will highlight where risks lie for your company and what compliance should start to look like moving forward.
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https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/open-data
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https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/its-time-to-open-preparing-for-new-open-data-and-reuse-of-psi-directive-tickets-143034131939#
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Create a foundation to manage personal data through a data lake
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Similar to Data days 2014 open data in vlaanderen 1 (20)
4. 1. Open Data is the norm at the Flemish government
2. Re-use of this data is permitted, also for commercial purposes
3. Open Data makes use of open standards
4. Open data from authentic data sources
5. Open data using an integrative approach
6. VO business data in a central repository
5. Open Data in Flanders – the long walk to being “open”
2012 - 2013
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Too expensive
There’s no business case
There’s no commercial value
It’s private
It’s secret
It’s not ours, and we don’t know who’s data it is
No idea what the quality of the data is
We don’t know where to find it
It’s not our job
It isn’t in the right format
I am not authorised
People are going to misuse it
Image damage for the minister
We not ready for this
Image loss for Government
The data file is too big
Not enough bandwidth
This is a first step
We can’t find it, we have no access
It is out of date / too old
We have it on paper
We don’t know if it’s legal
Management says no
We never did this before
Who is going to use this anyway
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No value in it
No time / no resources
We will open up (but adapt 90%)
It’s incorrect
Commercially sensitive
It is dangerous when linked
People are going to make the wrong conclusions
This is going to start a wrong discussion
We can’t say whether we have it or we don’t
We know the data is wrong, and people will tell us where it is wrong, then we'd waste
resources inputting the corrections people send us
Our IT suppliers will charge us a fortune to do an ad hoc data extract
Our website cannot hold files this large
it's not ours and we don't have authorisation from the data owner
We've already published the data (but it's unfindable/unusable)
People may download and cache the data and it will be out of date when they reuse it
We don't collect it regularly
Too many people will want to download it, which will cause our servers to fail
People would get upset
It’s very sensitive information
We are not ready for this
Tell us who is going to use it and we will make it open
Etc..
22. Our future plans can be summerised as such:
1. We are going to keep working on quality. The quality of
everything we do, the quality of the datasets, the quality
of our platform, and so on and so forth..
2. The service we offer to our partners and customers, be it
internal organisations at the Flemish, be it
citizins, businesses or otherwise..
3. Reliability. People need to be able to rely on us, rely on
the availability of the datasets, a single point of
contact, constant attention to detail.
24. Some of our challenges:
1.The quality of our datasets
2.Licensing: proper usage of licensing of Public data is
essential. The more Open Data activities continue, the
clearer this rule becomes. What distinguishes Open Data
from "mere" transparency is reuse
3.Privacy issues
4.Continued co-operation amongst open data actors and
open data champions instead of competing against each
other
5.Hoping that organizations working with open data or
facilitating open data efforts are going to work with us
instead of agains us
6.Keeping entities from building their own applications
7.Finding the necessary budget under present economical
conditions