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GO Open Data – Futures Panel . May 21, 2013. Source: 123opendata.com. Topics. Introductions Key points we heard today University of Waterloo/Higher Education Directions Opportunities Future Let’s hear from the panel and you!. Open Data – What We Heard….
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GO Open Data – Futures Panel May 21, 2013 Source: 123opendata.com
Topics • Introductions • Key points we heard today • University of Waterloo/Higher Education • Directions • Opportunities • Future • Let’s hear from the panel and you!
Open Data – What We Heard… • Open data has unique challenges • The Open Data movement is transforming our society and economy in numerous of ways … and privacy can still be upheld! • Transparency and openness are key to any business and especially public institutions • Open data underlines accountability and open government • Open data upholds trust for governments and institutions • Open data promotes new innovation – but it takes • Collaboration and developers, engaged citizens, governments and institutions to work together in new ways • “Developer friendly data” – actually “friendly” period! • Open licenses and effective policies • “Open Data Alley” networking discussions Note: This is a placeholder that will be updated throughout the day
Higher Education – Online Source: Waterloo LEARN Source: Coursera
“Quantum Valley” Source: IQC
Opportunities • Shared terms and conditions • Common data catalogue • One client focus • Privacy assessment method • Information sharing • Open Application Program Interface
For Higher Ed…The Future is More Openness • More access to data to students, faculty, research donors, partners and the public in general • More effective reporting to the other levels of government that will enhance planning and therefore more efficiencies in the delivery of services • Performance measures of institutions and governments (and industry) will increasingly be important to the public • Continued alignment and partnerships with other higher education institutions, government and with industry
Panel Presentations • Heather Leson • Jury Konga • Patricia D'Souza
Nice data, so what?
@heatherleson textontechs.com Photo by Jonathan Kalan
BEYOND Open Data Open Data … blah, blah, blah Jury Konga, Principal eGovFutures GroupMay 11, 2013. University of Waterloo Pharmacy Building
Beyond Open Data- Personal to Global Wellbeing Community Personal Global Source: Wellbeing Toronto Source: Health and Wellbeing UK
Beyond Open Data - Open Government Open Data Open Innovation • Core components • Open Data is foundational • “Open Hub”: C3 • Supporting Infrastructure Community Engagement Citizen Engagement Citizen Engagement Citizen Engagement Citizen Engagement Citizen Engagement Citizen Engagement Open Knowledge Open Decisions • Open Hub: C3 • Commons • Communication • Collaboration Open Economics Supporting Infrastructure • Data • Financial & Human Resources • Policy& Standards • Technology Leadership & Governance Version 2 of 2010 Open Government Framework Jury Konga Open by Design TM
Beyond Open Data- a shift in resources More Community … less government … more collaboration & partnering
Beyond Open Data- ubiquitous The Internet of Things – open data is just part of that Municipal Public Service Provincial Federal External Data Linkages Academia, Non-Profits, Community Groups OpenData.CA www.govtech.com/What-is-the-Internet-of-Everything.html OpenStreetMap Community Updates Evolved from Data Infra- structure model circa 1994 Source: Municipal Open Government Framework, 2010
Beyond Open Data- real time Mobile World Global SensorFeeds Source: Shore-Designs.com Source: AutoGuide.com Source: NASA
BEYOND Open Data … making the world a better place jkonga@sympatico.ca @jkonga www.slideshare.net/jurykonga
Open Data in theProvince of Ontario Patricia D’Souza Head, Strategy Planning and Enterprise Architecture Government of Ontario May 11, 2013
Open Data : Ontario’s Program November 2012 April 2012 Phase 1 December 2012 Spring 2013 Phase 2 27
Where We Are Today: 5 Steps to Publishing Data Step 1:Identify Data Step 2:Assess Data Step 3: Prepare Data Step 4: Get approvals Step 5:Publish! 1 2 3 4 5
Challenge: Is Ontario data of value? Two days after the Open Data catalogue was launched, a data journalist used Ontario data to inform citizens on the quality of drinking water by analysing and overlaying the data on Google maps.
What’s Next: Addressing Challenges Additional functionality, including search and datavisualization New Partnerships across sectors (government, academia, business) Updated Policies to support a culture shift towards a “share first” philosophy