What Are The Drone Anti-jamming Systems Technology?
BIG Data Open Data - Opportunities
1. BIG Data + Open Data
- BIG Opportunities Ahead
Institute of Public Administration of Canada
Jury Konga, Principal
eGovFutures Group
@jkonga
Ontario Investment & Trade Centre
Toronto, Ontario. March 4, 2014
2. Overview
Context … Big , Open
Some challenges …
The Road ahead
- Opportunities of Big & Open Data
Title graphics from City 2.0
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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3. Context – Yesteryear and Today
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Source: Don Tapscott 2012 TED Global
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4. Context – (Big) Data Landscape
Add
Data
Visualization
Key: Data Management, IM, RM
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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5. “A Colloquial Definition of Big,
Open, and Personal Data”
Context – B-O-P Data
Big Data is (i) data that you cannot handle
with conventional tools or (ii) a term used
as a vague metaphor for solving problems
with data.
Open Data is data that anyone can use;
without legal, technical or financial
barriers.
More formal Open Knowledge Foundation writes: A
piece of data or content is open if anyone is free to
use, reuse, and redistribute it — subject only, at most,
to the requirement to attribute and/or share-alike.
Personal Data is data derived from
people, where you can distinguish a
person from other people in the group.
Source: The Open Data Institute (UK)
github.com/theodi/data-definitions
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
More formal: personally identifiable information (PII)
from the ISO 29100 standard (privacy framework).
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6. Context – Personal Data
Source: Open Data Institute
github.com/theodi/data-definitions
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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7. Context – Privacy
Source: Ontario IPC www.privacybydesign.ca/
“One of the most important ways to
address the privacy issues
associated with big data is to
routinely de-identify health
information prior to its use or
disclosure for research purposes”
Also related to Open Data:
www.ipc.on.ca/english/access-to-information/Introduction-to-AbD/
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Information &
Privacy Commissioner
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8. Context – How Big is Big Data
3,500
Petabytes
in N. Am.
Growing
35 Zetta
bytes per
year
1000 Megabytes = 1 Gigabyte, 1000 Gigabytes = 1 Terabyte , 1000 Terabytes = 1 Petabyte , 1000 Petabytes = 1 Exabyte … Zetta, Yotta
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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9. 1.3M YouTube views; 2+M Google searches
Context – an Internet Minute
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
… it continues to grow – in size and services
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10. Context - Internet of Everything
Source: http://blogs.cisco.com/ioe/answering-the-two-most-asked-questions-about-the-internet-of-everything/
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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11. Context
- Our “Connected Planet”
Source: Don Tapscott - 2013 talk, the Tapscott Group
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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12. Context – How Big is Big Data
LOTS
of Players!
Source:
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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13. Context – How Open is Open Data
Currently
63 countries
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Currently ….
Federal
BC, AB, ON, QC
40 municipalities
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14. Context – How Open is Open Data
Metrics on open data vary
as per definition and/or
methodology
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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15. Open – not just Government Data
In Stunning Win For Open Science, Johnson
& Johnson Decides To Release Its Clinical
Trial Data To Researchers … Forbes, Jan. 30,
2014.
“Open Science” has 2
focal points
Open scientific software
Open access to scientific
data
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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16. Open – not just Government Data
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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17. Lots of BIG and Open Data
- No value without use
… recognize some challenges
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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19. Challenges … Corporate IM
Look familiar?
Often we don’t know
what we have!
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
Life in
Silo land
DATA
DATA
DATA
DATA
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20. Challenges … Corporate Culture
Outdated
Policies
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Resistance
to Change
Risk
Aversion
Leadership
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21. TED 2012 Winner
- Not to an individual, but to an idea
Opportunities
-Big Data & City 2.0
Stats on urbanization
Urban challenges &
opportunities include
“The City 2.0 is a place of beauty, wonder,
excitement, inclusion, diversity, life.”
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
•
•
•
•
•
•
Transportation
Housing
Energy
Environment
Education
Community Wellbeing
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22. Big Data Opportunities
- Smart Cities /Intelligent Communities
City of the Future
Source: IDC Whitepaper on “Delivering Next
Generation Citizen Services”
Smart + Connected Communities
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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23. Big Data Opportunities
- Smart Cities
Process is simple, Execution is complex
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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24. Big Data Opportunities
- Smart Geographic Area or Theme
Not just at city
level … it’s a
continuum
Themes include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
… sensor city
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Health
Environment
Transportation
Energy
Natural Resources
Education
Economic
Development
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25. Big Data Opportunities
- real time Mobile World
Algorithm
Assessment
Global
“Solutions “
Hub
Time
Series
Analytics
Global
Sensor
Feeds
Source: NASA
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Source: Shore-Designs.com
Source: AutoGuide.com
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26. Opportunity - Integrated Service Delivery
Service Requests
Requests from MyGovID
1 (Facebook, Linkedin, Twitter)
Service One (2.0)
2 - The Service
Coordinator
Integrated Service Delivery “Engine”
3
•Products
& Services
Standardized Processes, Protocols
and Knowledge Base
•Products
& Services
Provincial
Municipal
Process A
3
Private &
NonProfits
•Products
& Services
Process
B
Process C
Federal
•Products
& Services
Business
Knowledge
Database
Source: From a Social to a Service Web, 2009. www.slideshare.net/jkonga
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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27. Opportunities
- Open Data fuels the Digital Economy
Government
Data
Corporate
Data
OPEN
DATA
Community
Data
&
A
D
V
O
C
A
C
Y
Needs
&
Feeds
Science
Data
Source: www.slideshare.net/JuryKonga/open-government-intelligent-community-in-the-digital-economy , 2012
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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28. Opportunities
- Open Data Economics
Source: McKinsey Global Institute;
Open data: Unlocking innovation and performance with liquid information
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
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29. Opportunities
- One Stop Open Data
Integrate & Scale
Public
Provincial
External
Data Linkages
(e.g. World Bank)
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Share the data
Federal
OpenData.CA
Evolved from Data Infrastructure model circa 1994
Find the data
Municipal Service
OpenStreetMap
Community
Updates
Academia, NonProfits,
Community
Groups
OpenData.
EARTH
USE
the data
Source: Municipal Open Government Framework, 2010 www.slideshare.net/jurykonga
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31. Environmental Wellbeing
- A COMPLEX ecosystem
AIR
Global
National
Opportunities
- Big & Open Data
WATER
Global
National
Provincial
Provincial
Local
Local
Real-time Open
Environmental Network
Global
National
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
National
Provincial
BIODIVERSITY
Global
Provincial
Local
LAND
Local
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32. Opportunities
- Open & Crowdsourced Data
Feeding Infrastructure Planning
Government
Decision Making
… both asset & liability
Public Sector
Data Sharing
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
Open 311
Open Data Feeds
Boston Street
Bump App
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34. Opportunity
- Big Data, Open Data, Personal Data
ETA & Patient Data
U.S. Blue
Button service
Digital Health
Records
4
511 Road &
Traffic
Updates
3
Family
4
Responders
Transport Info
Medical Emergency
Auto 911
ETA Data
2
Heart Attack Sensed
1
… what’s stopping us from having this
Jury Konga
Open by Design TM
(Concept)
AED(efib) Data
3
Social Media
(with Subject
location)
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36. BIG & OPEN Data Opportunities
… making the world a better place
Jury Konga, Principal
eGovFutures Group
Affiliations
Open Knowledge Foundation, Canada Ambassador
Canadian Open Data Institute – Co-Founder
Ontario IPC “Access by Design” Ambassador
jkonga@sympatico.ca
@jkonga www.slideshare.net/jurykonga
Notas do Editor
We’re headed into a real time mobile world. The combination of the “Internet of Everything” and the future power of quantum computing that Dave noted, will provide us with a “Global Solutions Hub.Solutions require a number of elements including data, analytics and visualization. The relevance of the derived “solutions” will be dependent on the quality and completeness of these components. We already see global sensor webs acquiring and publishing data from a variety of sources from NASAs constellation of imagery satellites to near field vehicle communication to in-pavement parking sensors to seismic sensors.Todays Smart phones will become smarter over time and become part of an integrated smart communities ecosystem (local to global). People are an important part of the global sensor system – we dial 911 to alert authorities of emergency situations, we report pot holes to identify traffic hazards, we develop social statements & campaigns through twitter and applications are developed every day to do even more.What's equally important for the future is inclusiveness – even today we suffer from the digital divide and its important we strive to allow everyone access and opportunity to participate in our global solutions hub that seeks to make our collective day to day living better.
mGov for the Future should allow anyone to make a literal service or information request from their mobile device …Lets consider the need for a “Service Coordinator” that analyses the request and then determines which government(s) need to be sent the service request for responseTo effectively and efficiently address the service request, we need an Integrated Service Delivery “engine” that facilitates coordination among all the service providers – Note this not only includes government but also the private and non-profit sectors who may actually be the service providersWith this as a futures view, a few concluding remarks …
Many people, including Minister Clement, have identified Open Data as the fuel for the 21st century knowledge economy.Open Data is typically associated with government data but we’re seeing that expand to into the scientific data realm as well as more corporate and community data. All of this can feed into the operations of an intelligent community.Open Data is a huge asset so how can we optimize it ..
We’re headed into a real time mobile world. The combination of the “Internet of Everything” and the future power of quantum computing that Dave noted, will provide us with a “Global Solutions Hub.Solutions require a number of elements including data, analytics and visualization. The relevance of the derived “solutions” will be dependent on the quality and completeness of these components. We already see global sensor webs acquiring and publishing data from a variety of sources from NASAs constellation of imagery satellites to near field vehicle communication to in-pavement parking sensors to seismic sensors.Todays Smart phones will become smarter over time and become part of an integrated smart communities ecosystem (local to global). People are an important part of the global sensor system – we dial 911 to alert authorities of emergency situations, we report pot holes to identify traffic hazards, we develop social statements & campaigns through twitter and applications are developed every day to do even more.What's equally important for the future is inclusiveness – even today we suffer from the digital divide and its important we strive to allow everyone access and opportunity to participate in our global solutions hub that seeks to make our collective day to day living better.
Examples of large, medium and small municipalities having Open Data “Catalogues” where people can freely access, download and re-use municipal dataI’m aware of others that are in the planning stages – so more on the way
Examples of large, medium and small municipalities having Open Data “Catalogues” where people can freely access, download and re-use municipal dataI’m aware of others that are in the planning stages – so more on the way
We’re headed into a real time mobile world. The combination of the “Internet of Everything” and the future power of quantum computing that Dave noted, will provide us with a “Global Solutions Hub.Solutions require a number of elements including data, analytics and visualization. The relevance of the derived “solutions” will be dependent on the quality and completeness of these components. We already see global sensor webs acquiring and publishing data from a variety of sources from NASAs constellation of imagery satellites to near field vehicle communication to in-pavement parking sensors to seismic sensors.Todays Smart phones will become smarter over time and become part of an integrated smart communities ecosystem (local to global). People are an important part of the global sensor system – we dial 911 to alert authorities of emergency situations, we report pot holes to identify traffic hazards, we develop social statements & campaigns through twitter and applications are developed every day to do even more.What's equally important for the future is inclusiveness – even today we suffer from the digital divide and its important we strive to allow everyone access and opportunity to participate in our global solutions hub that seeks to make our collective day to day living better.