Simona De Rosa from T6 Ecosystems presented the policy dialogue approach defined within the i3 project, aiming to support the development of policy recommendations on Convergence and Social Media to be addressed to the European Commision.
This document summarizes the key challenges in regulating convergent media in Australia. It discusses how traditional media regulation based on licensed broadcasting, ownership rules, and content standards no longer fits a media environment characterized by globalization, convergence of content and delivery platforms, and user-generated content. It analyzes challenges to the traditional "public interest" regulatory model and whether technological change favors a more neoliberal approach. The document also examines issues around measuring and regulating media concentration and influence in this new environment.
A presentation from Urska Umek at the Council of Europe on the Online and offline threats to media pluralism. Presented at the 2018 CMPF conference, Measuring Media Pluralism in Europe - Between Old Risks and New Threats.
UNESCO has developed the Internet Universality Indicators (IUIs) framework to assess national internet development environments. The IUIs are based on principles of Rights, Openness, Accessibility, and Multistakeholder participation. There are 303 indicators across 5 categories and 124 questions. The IUIs were endorsed by UNESCO's International Programme for the Development of Communication in 2018 to be used voluntarily by member states and stakeholders to conduct national internet assessments.
Presentation from Lubos Kuklis of ERGA (European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services).
Presented at the 2018 CMPF Conference "Monitoring Media Pluralism - Between Old Risks and New Threats,"
1) Economic consolidation in the digital advertising market poses a threat to media plurality as a small number of large tech companies like Google and Facebook dominate online advertising revenue.
2) Technological changes introduced by digital platforms could threaten quality of information by reducing the diversity of news sources and enabling the spread of disinformation.
3) The MPM 2020 project aims to update the existing Media Pluralism Monitor to better assess new digital-age risks to media plurality from factors like social media microtargeting, algorithmic news personalization, and filter bubbles.
This document summarizes the key challenges in regulating convergent media in Australia. It discusses how traditional media regulation based on licensed broadcasting, ownership rules, and content standards no longer fits a media environment characterized by globalization, convergence of content and delivery platforms, and user-generated content. It analyzes challenges to the traditional "public interest" regulatory model and whether technological change favors a more neoliberal approach. The document also examines issues around measuring and regulating media concentration and influence in this new environment.
A presentation from Urska Umek at the Council of Europe on the Online and offline threats to media pluralism. Presented at the 2018 CMPF conference, Measuring Media Pluralism in Europe - Between Old Risks and New Threats.
UNESCO has developed the Internet Universality Indicators (IUIs) framework to assess national internet development environments. The IUIs are based on principles of Rights, Openness, Accessibility, and Multistakeholder participation. There are 303 indicators across 5 categories and 124 questions. The IUIs were endorsed by UNESCO's International Programme for the Development of Communication in 2018 to be used voluntarily by member states and stakeholders to conduct national internet assessments.
Presentation from Lubos Kuklis of ERGA (European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services).
Presented at the 2018 CMPF Conference "Monitoring Media Pluralism - Between Old Risks and New Threats,"
1) Economic consolidation in the digital advertising market poses a threat to media plurality as a small number of large tech companies like Google and Facebook dominate online advertising revenue.
2) Technological changes introduced by digital platforms could threaten quality of information by reducing the diversity of news sources and enabling the spread of disinformation.
3) The MPM 2020 project aims to update the existing Media Pluralism Monitor to better assess new digital-age risks to media plurality from factors like social media microtargeting, algorithmic news personalization, and filter bubbles.
The document discusses the debate around proprietary versus open source software in the public sector. It outlines that information and communication technologies (ICT) have become increasingly important for public services but also present political questions around control and development paths. The document argues for an interdisciplinary research approach to explore these issues more fully, drawing on different academic fields. It notes ICT has transitioned from being an outsourced activity to a core function and discusses how political regimes of New Public Management versus Digital Era Governance approach ICT development differently.
ODDC Context - Opening the Cities: Open Government Data in Local Governments ...Open Data Research Network
Presentation in the first workshop of the Exploring the Emerging Impacts of Open Data in Developing Countries project. Looking at the context of open data, and the research case study planned for 2013 - 2014. See http://www.opendataresearch.org/project/2013/jcv
ODDC Context - An Investigation of the use of the Online National Budget of N...Open Data Research Network
This document summarizes a case study investigating the use of Nigeria's online national budget data. A research team from the University of Ilorin analyzed budget data published by the Nigerian government since 2007. The goals of the study are to understand how the public engages with the national budget, assess media coverage of the budget, and identify challenges to using open budget data. The methodology includes surveys of government institutions, stakeholders, and media analysis of newspaper coverage and online discussions around the 2013 budget. The research aims to explore how open budget data can drive better governance in Nigeria.
An overview of the Strategic Content Alliance IPR Toolkit development, including the first UK Orphan Works Survey with the Collections Trust. This overview looks at the challenges and opportunities in the field of IPR - which will be assisted through the development of an IPR Toolkit due for delivery in Q1 2009.
Project COMPACT From research to policy through raising awareness of the stat...Oles Kulchytskyy
COMPACT is a Coordination and Support Action funded European Commission under framework Horizon 2020.
The objective of the COMPACT project is to increase awareness (including scientific, political, cultural, legal, economic and technical areas) of the latest technological discoveries among key stakeholders in the context of social media and convergence. The project will offer analyses and road maps of related initiatives. In addition, extensive research on policies and regulatory frameworks in media and content will be developed.
http://compact-media.eu/
Consultation for inclusive infrastructure - Alberto ALEMANNO, HEC Paris/NYU S...OECD Governance
This presentation was made by Alberto ALEMANNO, HEC Paris/NYU School of Law, at the 3rd OECD Forum on Governance of Infrastructure held in Paris on 26 March 2018
The document summarizes a project exploring how online tools are used for political communication and issue analysis. The project examines how users discover and understand political issues like health, economy, and environment. Through workshops, interviews, and analysis, the project aims to provide design recommendations and prototypes for a Political Issue Analysis System. The system would explore evolving online political tools, examine deliberative processes among stakeholders, and test and refine recommendations for analyzing political issues.
Using a lens of feedback and engagement this paper discusses the relationships between people, organisations, and energy use in workplaces. It reflects on two projects that explored participatory energy practices in public and private organisations. The first, “Working with Infrastructure, Creation of Knowledge, and Energy strategy Development (WICKED)”, explored energy management practices in a range of different retail companies. The second, ‘Gooddeeds’ aimed to collaboratively create an ICT based tool and related social processes with a city municipality. The paper concludes, firstly, that energy management sits against the backdrop of competing organisational, institutional and political priorities and the core strategy of an organisation matters. Second, we need to move beyond the ‘them and us’ culture and ‘information-deficit’ approach intrinsic in the notion of dashboards and feedback to appreciate the positive contribution all can make to energy efficiency. Finally, there are still large discrepancies across organisations with regards to energy management capabilities and metering technologies. In conclusion we note that relationships and partnerships are central in moving forward.
This document summarizes two studies conducted by the European Commission (EC) on eAccessibility.
The first study monitored the status and progress of eAccessibility in 12 EU countries and 3 non-EU countries. It analyzed surveys from national experts, technology experts, and policy experts. The study produced annual reports, a website with benchmarking tools, and reports on transposition of accessibility directives.
The second study assessed the economic impacts of improving eAccessibility for web content, digital TV, ATMs and other technologies. It developed a cost-benefit analysis tool for organizations and estimated aggregate economic benefits and costs. The study provided recommendations to policymakers and involved member states in validating outcomes.
The evolution of the interoperability concept a european quest for simplicity...PanagiotisKeramidis
The document discusses the evolution of the concept of interoperability from academic literature to frameworks developed by the European Union. It provides definitions of interoperability from academic literature and the 2017 European Interoperability Framework (EIF). The EIF definition focuses on the ability of organizations to interact towards mutually beneficial goals through information exchange, while academic definitions are more technical and lack objectives. The EU has developed initiatives and frameworks like the EIF to increase interoperability across systems and organizations in a governance approach. However, the concept remains complex with dispersed views as it has strongly evolved over time and fields.
Open Government Data Ecosystems: Linking Transparency for Innovation with Tra...Luigi Reggi
Presentation at IFIP EGOV 2016 Conference. September 5, 2016.
Abstract. The rhetoric of open government data (OGD) promises that data transparency will lead to multiple public benefits: economic and social innovation, civic participation, public-private collaboration, and public accountability. In reality much less has been accomplished in practice than advocates have hoped. OGD research to address this gap tends to fall into two streams – one that focuses on data publication and re-use for purposes of innovation, and one that views publication as a stimulus for civic participation and government accountability - with little attention to whether or how these two views interact. In this paper we use an ecosystem perspective to explore this question. Through an exploratory case study we show how two related cycles of influences can flow from open data publication. The first addresses transparency for innovation goals, the second addresses larger issues of data use for public engagement and greater government accountability. Together they help explain the potential and also the barriers to reaching both kinds of goals.
The document discusses OpenCoesione, an Italian government initiative that aims to promote transparency around Cohesion Policy funds from the EU. It provides open data on over 800,000 projects funded totaling €80 billion. The goals are to improve decision making, increase civic participation, and encourage analysis of policy impact. It summarizes the types of data available on the OpenCoesione website, how often it is updated, and efforts to promote its use through data journalism and civic monitoring of local projects.
This is a presentation of research done within the EU Community project and its evaluation, combining reputation management and sentiment analysis techniques for policy modelling
This document discusses understanding and improving the uptake and utilization of open data. It aims to present the state of open data programs, highlight opportunities in open data adoption, and identify issues and challenges.
The document provides background on the continued interest in open data and the growing adoption by institutions. It summarizes findings from recent surveys that show over 380 open data catalogs globally and over 150 in Europe. The 2013 Open Data Barometer is discussed, which ranks countries' open data readiness, implementation, and impact. The UK ranks as most advanced while few datasets are truly open with accessible licenses and formats.
Issues and challenges to open data uptake include few high-value datasets, lack of access to information laws, and limited training
Heritiana Ranaivoson from iMec presented ImmersiaTV project, that aims to create a novel form of broadcast omnidirectional video, content production and delivery, and the WEAR project, which aims to foster artists to use technology.
Heritiana Ranaivoson from iMec presented ImmersiaTV project, that aims to create a novel form of broadcast omnidirectional video, content production and delivery, and the WEAR project, which aims to foster artists to use technology.
The document discusses the debate around proprietary versus open source software in the public sector. It outlines that information and communication technologies (ICT) have become increasingly important for public services but also present political questions around control and development paths. The document argues for an interdisciplinary research approach to explore these issues more fully, drawing on different academic fields. It notes ICT has transitioned from being an outsourced activity to a core function and discusses how political regimes of New Public Management versus Digital Era Governance approach ICT development differently.
ODDC Context - Opening the Cities: Open Government Data in Local Governments ...Open Data Research Network
Presentation in the first workshop of the Exploring the Emerging Impacts of Open Data in Developing Countries project. Looking at the context of open data, and the research case study planned for 2013 - 2014. See http://www.opendataresearch.org/project/2013/jcv
ODDC Context - An Investigation of the use of the Online National Budget of N...Open Data Research Network
This document summarizes a case study investigating the use of Nigeria's online national budget data. A research team from the University of Ilorin analyzed budget data published by the Nigerian government since 2007. The goals of the study are to understand how the public engages with the national budget, assess media coverage of the budget, and identify challenges to using open budget data. The methodology includes surveys of government institutions, stakeholders, and media analysis of newspaper coverage and online discussions around the 2013 budget. The research aims to explore how open budget data can drive better governance in Nigeria.
An overview of the Strategic Content Alliance IPR Toolkit development, including the first UK Orphan Works Survey with the Collections Trust. This overview looks at the challenges and opportunities in the field of IPR - which will be assisted through the development of an IPR Toolkit due for delivery in Q1 2009.
Project COMPACT From research to policy through raising awareness of the stat...Oles Kulchytskyy
COMPACT is a Coordination and Support Action funded European Commission under framework Horizon 2020.
The objective of the COMPACT project is to increase awareness (including scientific, political, cultural, legal, economic and technical areas) of the latest technological discoveries among key stakeholders in the context of social media and convergence. The project will offer analyses and road maps of related initiatives. In addition, extensive research on policies and regulatory frameworks in media and content will be developed.
http://compact-media.eu/
Consultation for inclusive infrastructure - Alberto ALEMANNO, HEC Paris/NYU S...OECD Governance
This presentation was made by Alberto ALEMANNO, HEC Paris/NYU School of Law, at the 3rd OECD Forum on Governance of Infrastructure held in Paris on 26 March 2018
The document summarizes a project exploring how online tools are used for political communication and issue analysis. The project examines how users discover and understand political issues like health, economy, and environment. Through workshops, interviews, and analysis, the project aims to provide design recommendations and prototypes for a Political Issue Analysis System. The system would explore evolving online political tools, examine deliberative processes among stakeholders, and test and refine recommendations for analyzing political issues.
Using a lens of feedback and engagement this paper discusses the relationships between people, organisations, and energy use in workplaces. It reflects on two projects that explored participatory energy practices in public and private organisations. The first, “Working with Infrastructure, Creation of Knowledge, and Energy strategy Development (WICKED)”, explored energy management practices in a range of different retail companies. The second, ‘Gooddeeds’ aimed to collaboratively create an ICT based tool and related social processes with a city municipality. The paper concludes, firstly, that energy management sits against the backdrop of competing organisational, institutional and political priorities and the core strategy of an organisation matters. Second, we need to move beyond the ‘them and us’ culture and ‘information-deficit’ approach intrinsic in the notion of dashboards and feedback to appreciate the positive contribution all can make to energy efficiency. Finally, there are still large discrepancies across organisations with regards to energy management capabilities and metering technologies. In conclusion we note that relationships and partnerships are central in moving forward.
This document summarizes two studies conducted by the European Commission (EC) on eAccessibility.
The first study monitored the status and progress of eAccessibility in 12 EU countries and 3 non-EU countries. It analyzed surveys from national experts, technology experts, and policy experts. The study produced annual reports, a website with benchmarking tools, and reports on transposition of accessibility directives.
The second study assessed the economic impacts of improving eAccessibility for web content, digital TV, ATMs and other technologies. It developed a cost-benefit analysis tool for organizations and estimated aggregate economic benefits and costs. The study provided recommendations to policymakers and involved member states in validating outcomes.
The evolution of the interoperability concept a european quest for simplicity...PanagiotisKeramidis
The document discusses the evolution of the concept of interoperability from academic literature to frameworks developed by the European Union. It provides definitions of interoperability from academic literature and the 2017 European Interoperability Framework (EIF). The EIF definition focuses on the ability of organizations to interact towards mutually beneficial goals through information exchange, while academic definitions are more technical and lack objectives. The EU has developed initiatives and frameworks like the EIF to increase interoperability across systems and organizations in a governance approach. However, the concept remains complex with dispersed views as it has strongly evolved over time and fields.
Open Government Data Ecosystems: Linking Transparency for Innovation with Tra...Luigi Reggi
Presentation at IFIP EGOV 2016 Conference. September 5, 2016.
Abstract. The rhetoric of open government data (OGD) promises that data transparency will lead to multiple public benefits: economic and social innovation, civic participation, public-private collaboration, and public accountability. In reality much less has been accomplished in practice than advocates have hoped. OGD research to address this gap tends to fall into two streams – one that focuses on data publication and re-use for purposes of innovation, and one that views publication as a stimulus for civic participation and government accountability - with little attention to whether or how these two views interact. In this paper we use an ecosystem perspective to explore this question. Through an exploratory case study we show how two related cycles of influences can flow from open data publication. The first addresses transparency for innovation goals, the second addresses larger issues of data use for public engagement and greater government accountability. Together they help explain the potential and also the barriers to reaching both kinds of goals.
The document discusses OpenCoesione, an Italian government initiative that aims to promote transparency around Cohesion Policy funds from the EU. It provides open data on over 800,000 projects funded totaling €80 billion. The goals are to improve decision making, increase civic participation, and encourage analysis of policy impact. It summarizes the types of data available on the OpenCoesione website, how often it is updated, and efforts to promote its use through data journalism and civic monitoring of local projects.
This is a presentation of research done within the EU Community project and its evaluation, combining reputation management and sentiment analysis techniques for policy modelling
This document discusses understanding and improving the uptake and utilization of open data. It aims to present the state of open data programs, highlight opportunities in open data adoption, and identify issues and challenges.
The document provides background on the continued interest in open data and the growing adoption by institutions. It summarizes findings from recent surveys that show over 380 open data catalogs globally and over 150 in Europe. The 2013 Open Data Barometer is discussed, which ranks countries' open data readiness, implementation, and impact. The UK ranks as most advanced while few datasets are truly open with accessible licenses and formats.
Issues and challenges to open data uptake include few high-value datasets, lack of access to information laws, and limited training
Heritiana Ranaivoson from iMec presented ImmersiaTV project, that aims to create a novel form of broadcast omnidirectional video, content production and delivery, and the WEAR project, which aims to foster artists to use technology.
Heritiana Ranaivoson from iMec presented ImmersiaTV project, that aims to create a novel form of broadcast omnidirectional video, content production and delivery, and the WEAR project, which aims to foster artists to use technology.
Nina Klein from Frankfurt Book Fair presented New European Media (NEM) activities. NEM is a leading initiative in the Convergence and Social Media domain. Main activities and aims of the NEM were presented to the audience.
This document outlines a policy dialogue process with three activities: 1) Identifying policy issues and gaps through participation, 2) Advocacy and lobbying for policy changes, and 3) Setting up policy discussion forums involving policymakers. The objective is to increase policy awareness, enhance buy-in, and engage policymakers in development and recommendations. Key stakeholders include government, thematic groups, beneficiaries, and non-state actors. The process will use workshops, symposia, consultations, media, and capacity building over 1 year. It aims to develop sustainable, favorable policies and improve implementation through influence, dissemination of knowledge, and an enabling framework. Progress will be monitored using indicators like meetings held, sessions conducted, and inclusion in
The document discusses knowledge management for social policy innovation in the Global South. It outlines that strengthening knowledge management can help improve policy design and implementation for inclusive growth. It also notes the need to enhance South-South policy dialogue to reflect changing global governance. Key points made include that social policies in the South have helped reduce poverty and inequality, while the North faces crises and lacks innovative responses. There are also global inequities in knowledge production that policy dialogue platforms and knowledge sharing aim to address.
This document outlines the public policy formulation process. It begins with defining key concepts like policy and public policy. The public policy formulation process has four phases - initiation, generation, implementation, and evaluation. The initiation phase involves agenda-setting, identifying policy issues, and stakeholder engagement. The generation phase is when policies are formulated and drafted. Implementation involves enacting the policies. Evaluation is monitoring and assessing the policies. The document provides details on steps like policy analysis and stakeholder consultation that are part of the initiation and generation phases of the public policy formulation process.
This document provides an overview of public policy analysis. It discusses definitions of public policy, typologies of public policy, why governments intervene in markets, models of the policy process, and approaches to policy analysis. The key points are:
1) Public policy is defined in various ways but generally refers to courses of action by governments to address issues of public concern.
2) Public policy can be categorized in typologies such as patronage/promotional, regulatory, and redistributive policies.
3) Governments intervene in markets when societies desire certain goods like healthcare but the free market does not adequately provide them, or when markets fail due to issues like externalities, information problems, or barriers to entry.
WeGov was presented at the Samos 2010 Summit, “Declaration On the Future of ICT for Governance” in Samos, Greece, on the 8th July 2010. The presentation took place in Session V of the Summit. Session V focused on the subject "ICT Research meets practice". The session underlined the adoption of the research prototypes and ideas, as well as on the application of various innovative solutions in the Public Sector and the Local Administrations, with a view to achieve efficient services provision which will meet the administration needs with overall aim, to better serve the citizens.
The BYTE project aims to:
1) Produce a big data roadmap and recommendations for European stakeholders.
2) Involve relevant actors to identify problems and create a big data community.
3) Disseminate findings to encourage roadmap implementation and community participation.
One case study examines crisis informatics, finding that big data is beginning to improve situational awareness but focusing mainly on social media and geography. Validating data quality through "human computing" is innovative. Privacy and data protection challenges remain significant given the focus on social media data.
Mobile Internet's "Creative Destruction": Implications for Global Mobile PolicyMoving Media
Mobile Internet imbricated in current economic crisis & reshaping of geo-political & communication orders
not just mobiles + Internet, mobile Internet spans a complex assembly of emergent, hybrid media forms. From smartphones, tablets, and the apps phenomena, through new televisual ecologies and locative media, to pervasive computers, connected cars & smart cities.
The UN perspective on Digital Public PolicyGenève Lab
Présentation donnée par Peter Major, Acting chair, United Nations Commision on Science and Technology for Development lors de la conférence "politiques publiques à l'ère du numérique" le 29 novembre 2016 à Genève
Presentation at COMPACT Project event in Riga - Disinformation, Media literac...Oles Kulchytskyy
The symposium was organized by the University of Latvia Faculty of Social Sciences (FSS) on the 10th of December. Latvian researchers and opinion leaders, together with European partners,
presented the latest findings in the disinformation and media literacy field as well as discussed the futur challenges that the digital media landscape presents for scientists, decision-makers as well as every media user.
The purpose of this document is to provide a brief overview of open consultation approaches in the current, international setting and propose a role for Information Technologies (IT) as a disruptive force in this setting.
Our FutureTDM workshop at the European Parliament focus at the development of TDM policy. With EU copyright reform now in progress, we bring together policy makers and stakeholder groups so that we can share FutureTDM’s findings and our first expert driven policy recommendations that can help increase EU TDM.
The document discusses lessons learned from the OurSpace project, which aimed to create a cross-border eParticipation platform for youth political deliberation. An evaluation methodology was developed using 4 levels and 11 indicator categories to measure the project's objectives and results. The methodology included questionnaires, interviews, data analysis and focus groups. Results showed that while the platform facilitated relevant political discussions for youth, decision maker participation was limited. Technical features were satisfactory but could be enhanced to better support networking and community aspects. Promotion through diverse channels helped engage users.
The document summarizes achievements, challenges, and recommendations regarding the role of public governance authorities and stakeholders in promoting ICTs for development. Key achievements include governments providing more efficient services using ICTs, data revolution enabling new services, and UN agencies supporting national ICT strategies. Challenges involve limited resources, personnel competencies, access/affordability issues, and the digital divide. Recommendations focus on encouraging collaboration, developing policies/frameworks through stakeholder engagement, promoting affordable access, and ensuring citizen access to services.
The document discusses Digital Social Innovation (DSI) and the Collective Awareness Platforms for Sustainability and Social Innovation (CAPS) initiative. DSI is important for society, the environment, the economy, and the development of the internet. It leverages people's creativity and involves participatory, bottom-up, decentralized, multidisciplinary, and open approaches to innovation. The CAPS initiative funds projects that harness digital tools and networks to create awareness of sustainability challenges and collaborative solutions. The 3rd CAPS call will fund projects engaging civil society to address sustainability through new economic models based on open data, sources, and hardware.
State of the art research on Convergence and Social Media A Compendium on R&D...Oles Kulchytskyy
The information is prepared by the team of the COMPACT project (http://compact-media.eu/).
COMPACT is a Coordination and Support Action funded European Commission under framework Horizon 2020.
The objective of the COMPACT project is to increase awareness (including scientific, political, cultural, legal, economic and technical areas) of the latest technological discoveries among key stakeholders in the context of social media and convergence. The project will offer analyses and road maps of related initiatives. In addition, extensive research on policies and regulatory frameworks in media and content will be developed.
Workshop II on a Roadmap to Future GovernmentSamos2019Summit
In this session we proceed to presentations and discussion concerning the the development of the new roadmap for digital government. Two projects (Gov3.0 roadmap and Big Policy Canvas) will join forces in this exciting endeavor.
Organizers: Maria Wimmer, Professor, Koblentz University, Germany; Francesco Mureddu, Associate Directorr, Lisbon Council, Belgium; Juliane Schmeling Fraunhofer Institut FOKUS, Researcher, Germany; Shoumaya Ben Dhaou, Researcher, United Nations University, PT
This document summarizes a conference on Policy Making 2.0. It discusses the challenges of modern policy making, such as dealing with unknown unknowns and distributed governance. It outlines the goals of developing a research roadmap to strengthen the policy making community. The proposed method is open and recursive. The document envisions a third way of policy making that is open, evidence-based, and addresses the full policy cycle from anticipating issues to evaluation. It acknowledges challenges in ensuring technology leads to real policy impacts and cultural changes. Next steps include collaboratively curating examples and continuing discussion through online groups.
The document discusses the European Commission's policy on Collective Awareness Platforms for Sustainability and Social Innovation (CAPS). CAPS aims to harness ICT networks and collective intelligence to create awareness of sustainability challenges and collaborative solutions. It supports new economic models beyond GDP based on open data, open source and participatory innovation. The 3rd call of CAPS in the Horizon 2020 Work Programme will fund projects that demonstrate new forms of bottom-up social innovation using digital tools to address issues like sustainable lifestyles, social entrepreneurship and digital rights.
The document discusses the European Commission's policy on Collective Awareness Platforms for Sustainability and Social Innovation (CAPS). CAPS aims to harness ICT networks and collective intelligence to create awareness of sustainability challenges and collaborative solutions. It supports new economic models beyond GDP based on open data, open source and participatory innovation. The 3rd call of CAPS in the Horizon 2020 Work Programme will fund projects that demonstrate new forms of bottom-up social innovation using digital tools to address issues like sustainable lifestyles, social entrepreneurship and digital rights.
This document provides an overview and summary of a World Economic Forum report on the implications of digital media for society. It finds that digital media is fundamentally changing how people interact, work, learn and engage in civic life. While digital media provides many opportunities, it also poses some risks if its negative impacts are not addressed. The report is based on research from five countries and aims to raise awareness of these issues and stimulate discussion and action among stakeholders. It calls for public-private collaboration to maximize the benefits of digital media while mitigating the risks.
Mastering the Concepts Tested in the Databricks Certified Data Engineer Assoc...SkillCertProExams
• For a full set of 760+ questions. Go to
https://skillcertpro.com/product/databricks-certified-data-engineer-associate-exam-questions/
• SkillCertPro offers detailed explanations to each question which helps to understand the concepts better.
• It is recommended to score above 85% in SkillCertPro exams before attempting a real exam.
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XP 2024 presentation: A New Look to Leadershipsamililja
Presentation slides from XP2024 conference, Bolzano IT. The slides describe a new view to leadership and combines it with anthro-complexity (aka cynefin).
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Carrer goals.pptx and their importance in real lifeartemacademy2
Career goals serve as a roadmap for individuals, guiding them toward achieving long-term professional aspirations and personal fulfillment. Establishing clear career goals enables professionals to focus their efforts on developing specific skills, gaining relevant experience, and making strategic decisions that align with their desired career trajectory. By setting both short-term and long-term objectives, individuals can systematically track their progress, make necessary adjustments, and stay motivated. Short-term goals often include acquiring new qualifications, mastering particular competencies, or securing a specific role, while long-term goals might encompass reaching executive positions, becoming industry experts, or launching entrepreneurial ventures.
Moreover, having well-defined career goals fosters a sense of purpose and direction, enhancing job satisfaction and overall productivity. It encourages continuous learning and adaptation, as professionals remain attuned to industry trends and evolving job market demands. Career goals also facilitate better time management and resource allocation, as individuals prioritize tasks and opportunities that advance their professional growth. In addition, articulating career goals can aid in networking and mentorship, as it allows individuals to communicate their aspirations clearly to potential mentors, colleagues, and employers, thereby opening doors to valuable guidance and support. Ultimately, career goals are integral to personal and professional development, driving individuals toward sustained success and fulfillment in their chosen fields.
This presentation by Professor Alex Robson, Deputy Chair of Australia’s Productivity Commission, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Juraj Čorba, Chair of OECD Working Party on Artificial Intelligence Governance (AIGO), was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Suzanne Lagerweij - Influence Without Power - Why Empathy is Your Best Friend...Suzanne Lagerweij
This is a workshop about communication and collaboration. We will experience how we can analyze the reasons for resistance to change (exercise 1) and practice how to improve our conversation style and be more in control and effective in the way we communicate (exercise 2).
This session will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
Abstract:
Let’s talk about powerful conversations! We all know how to lead a constructive conversation, right? Then why is it so difficult to have those conversations with people at work, especially those in powerful positions that show resistance to change?
Learning to control and direct conversations takes understanding and practice.
We can combine our innate empathy with our analytical skills to gain a deeper understanding of complex situations at work. Join this session to learn how to prepare for difficult conversations and how to improve our agile conversations in order to be more influential without power. We will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
In the session you will experience how preparing and reflecting on your conversation can help you be more influential at work. You will learn how to communicate more effectively with the people needed to achieve positive change. You will leave with a self-revised version of a difficult conversation and a practical model to use when you get back to work.
Come learn more on how to become a real influencer!
This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Mẫu PPT kế hoạch làm việc sáng tạo cho nửa cuối năm PowerPoint
I3 policy dialogue
1. 1° i3 Multi-Stakeholder Forum
16 February 2017
Policy Dialogue: explaining the approach
and showing preliminary results
Simona De Rosa, Ph.D
T6ECO
2. Introduction
• I3 Policy Dialogue: aim and purposes
• I3 Policy Dialogue Process
• First results
• Next steps
3. • I3 will engage the stakeholder community of policy makers, entrepreneurs, start-
ups, etc., in a policy dialogue to address regulatory, normative and technical
complex aspects and in order to strengthen the relation between Social Media
and Convergence’ actors with Policy Makers.
• I3 will seek to exchange information and build consensus recommendation
between public and private sectors involving leaders who are in position to take
decisions and influence the legislative and normative drafting.
• I3 will seek to reach effective deliberation among the stakeholder involved
aspiring to produce concrete outputs solving relevant issues in the domain.
I3 Policy Dialogue: aim and purposes
4. Stakeholders to
engage
Topics to address Tools to use Data gathering
Policy
recommendation
I3 Policy Dialogue: main steps of the process
6. Massive transformation on the sector is happening:
• proliferation of connected devices and the wide availability of faster broadband
connections has affected the audiovisual distribution, disrupting the services based on
structured planning and timing television, to encourage new services (Donders, 2014);
• Improvement of “new media” (Social Media) changed the way in which media contents
are produced and consumed, User Generated Content (UGC) (Jenkins 2006).
• Birth of new players, while old players are revising their strategies.
Impact on business models and consumer habits is creating new challenges and
opportunities for the creative industries.
What emerged from desk analysis
7. From the EC perspective, convergence of media services and devices could
dramatically benefit from the creation of a Digital Single Market.
Such transformation is mainly related to the:
• Audio-Visual Media Services Directive (AVMSD) to address the digital market
needs, new way of consumption and technological changes;
• A colloquium on Fundamental Rights focusing on Media Pluralism and Democracy
(Links between a free and pluralist media space and democracy, November 2016).
• a consultation on Media freedom and Pluralism (June, 2013);
• a Green Paper “Converged a Audio Visual world”to share their views on the
changing media landscape and borderless internet ( September, 2013).
What emerged from desk analysis
8. • Market barriers reduce economic opportunities in the field for Social
Media and Convergence industry;
• Research ideas are not adequately supported in terms of economic
resources to go on the market;
• Revising EU copyright rules in order to fit for the digital age;
• Regulating access on the basis of community standards;
• Produce and sustain disruptive business models;
• Regulation on data protection;
• Support international cooperation and relationship between EU and USA in
the digital and social media topics;
• Monitoring and regulating evolution of social media.
Advisory board suggestions
9. • The survey was sent to different stakeholders:
• Associations engaged on Social Media, Broadcasters, Media interests
groups, Start-ups, Companies, Researchers, Investors, NGOs and ICT
19 projects.
• Topics, stakeholders to involve and tools to use.
Survey’s results
11. • More economic support for disruptive technologies;
• Different questions related to Accessibility from different
perspectives, from regulation to the production of accessible
contents;
• Regulation and support to Open Data and Big Data.
Additional topics from the survey
12. Actors for Policy Dialogue
1- EU Institution
2- National Authorities and Media Interest Group
3- Broadcasters
4- Media Companies
5- Startup and Regulatory Institutions
6- Academia
7- Citizens
Preferred tool:
• Online platform
• Fact-to-face meeting
Additional topics from the survey
13. Policy recommendation to be delivered to EC Commission
Final event
Open
Discussions
on Web
platform
Multi-
Stakeholders
Forums
I3 Next steps
14. • Validate results presented so far;
• Collect your feedback and your point of view;
• Produce a report that will be used for next activities on Policy
Dialogue.
…Today: First Multi-Stakeholder Forum
15. Thank you for your attention and for you
participation
S.derosa@t-6.it