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Explore the growing information industry and the shift in focus from opening up government data to effectively using it. Learn about the new challenges and opportunities in collecting, preparing, disseminating, analyzing, and delivering information. Discover how technology is changing and how to leverage civic and philanthropic impulses of the developer community. Collaborate with new allies and showcase high-quality web projects. Join the movement of Open Data 2.0.
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open data 2.0new challenges, new opportunities NNIP Funders Meeting October 20, 2010 Justin Massa Director of Project and Grant Development jmassa@mcic.org
the information industry is growing • the barriers of a decade ago are gone • anyone with time and a computer can engage in core NNIP activities of collecting, preparing, disseminating, analyzing, distributing information, and delivering insight • focus is shifting from opening up gov data to using it effectively
the web has changed everything • collectingdata • 270k+ data sets on data.gov; growing gov 2.0 movement • preparing, disseminating, and analyzing • ‘hobbyist’ data crunchers using increasingly sophisticated web-based and FLOSS tools • information and insight • GPS, weather, product safety, crime and safety, property search apps are ubiquitous
new challenges • big data may simply “empower the empowered”
new challenges • temptation to focus on areas outside of our core competencies • tech is changing fast; danger in ‘doubling down’ on one tech approach
new challenges • divide between NNIP and hobbyists / open gov movement • data divide • tech divide • institutional divide
new opportunities • next-generation municipal ‘apps competitions’ • demonstrating the effective / proper use of open data
new opportunities • community-based app building • ‘empowering the unempowered’ through innovative uses of data • leveraging civic and philanthropic impulses of the developer community
new opportunities • focus on data literacy through curriculum / training • collaborate with web developers around data and civic sector
new opportunities • highlighting high quality web projects • evaluating gov 2.0 applications and explaining shortcomings • ‘Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval’ for web data
new opportunities • collaborate with new allies • Sunlight Labs and Open Plans • O’Reilly Gov 2.0 Expos and Code for America • CityCamp movement • Knight Foundation