Open Data & ODI Overview 2014-11 (long version)

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Transcript of Open Data & ODI Overview 2014-11 (long version)

Gavin Starks CEO gavin@theODI.org

@agentGav

Addressing global challenges with open data

V2014-11-26

Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the web, tweeting from middle of the 2012 Olympics

Data licensed for use by anyone for any purpose for no cost

What is open data?

The data spectrum

Your personal finance records

Commercially sensitive

Your thoughts

The value of π |ß Combined health data à| A bus

timetable National security

Closed Open Shared

Sustain > 7,000,000,000 people Our challenge?

… Energy … Food … Water … Waste … … Education … Shelter … Transport …

… Health … Jobs …

Transparency Better services Public engagement

Jobs Open innovation Operational efficiency

Manage scarcity Risk assessment Manufacturing efficiency

Create Enable Improve

Triple-bottom-line impact

Why is social data important?

Data as culture → ubiquitous data changes human behavior Innovation → shift from products to services → transform services (e.g. MOOC, crowd) → data-driven decision-making → entirely new interactions

“the internet is changing the way we think” [Al Gore]

What is social data?

Population Education Health Law Crime Housing Transportation and travel Media & publications User-generated content Personal data-shadows

Why is environmental data important?

“I got it wrong on climate change – it's far, far worse” [Nicholas Stern] Investment and growth → energy supply, grids and efficiency markets → analytics at-scale to assess risk and insurance Governance and accountability → transparency increases accountability & competition Scarcity → effective resource management → systemic changes in supply-chain management

Maps / geographic Terrain / land-use Weather / climate Water / hydrographic Farming / species Pollution / ecosystems Materials / resource scarcity

What is environmental data?

Why is economic data important?

Stimulate investment → transparent rules-based commercial environments attract investment → make companies (both domestic and international) more competitive Improve governance and accountability → fiscal transparency increases accountability and is self-enforcing → shift to data-intensive, regulation-light environments can stimulate growth Reduce corruption → wide participation and systemic changes affect everyone → create a “race to the top”

“Transparency drives prosperity” [Open Government Partnership]

What is economic data?

Corporate ownership Corporate tax Public sector transactions Peer-to-peer lending Open procurement Market information (e.g. commodities) Asset registers (e.g. stranded assets) Supply-chain transactions Personal spending

What is the global political context?

“a new era in which people can use open data to generate insights, ideas, and services

to create a better world for all” G8 Open Data Charter 2013

“Openness will strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness in Government” President Obama

“Data is the new oil of the Internet and the new currency of the digital world” European Consumer Commissioner, Meglena Kuneva

“Open Data is at the heart of my agenda for Government” UK Prime Minister, David Cameron

Many countries, regions and cities are opening data

It’s not just political …

Global, regional, local – a shared vision

Political Politicians, UN, World Bank have shared ambitions Regional Smart-cities are driving efficiency and innovation Business McKinsey, Deloitte are signalling economic growth Innovators Start-ups are creating jobs Social NGO communities are building partnerships Individuals Engaged in improving their services, rebuilding trust

A global landscape for open data impact

Outcomes Social, environmental, and economic impact Outputs Transparency. Efficiency. Innovation. Reach Global – Country – City/Region – Individual Sectors Smart Cities … Finance … Insurance …

Energy … Water … Waste … Agriculture … Education … Food … Health … Transport …

theodi.org/culture

What is open data? What is its meaning? How is it used? Where is it found? What is its impact on society? As data is opened up, its interpretation must be reflected back to us from many angles - how can we do this? … 17 artists, 8 new art commissions

“Data as Culture” – opening up the conversation

Public talks TED Global, British Library, Universities, Cabinet Office

Events, exhibitions and workshops

Tate Modern, V&A, Lighthouse, The White Building, FutureEverything, The Space

International media coverage

BBC World Service, BBC Radio 4, The Guardian, The Telegraph, Wall Street Journal, Motherboard

ODI Data as Culture – millions reached

Vending Machine – Ellie Harrison http://theodi.org/data-as-culture-2012

* Metrography – Bertrand Clerk & Benedikt Groß © http://theodi.org/data-as-culture-2012

The Obelisk – Fabio Lattanzi Antinori http://theodi.org/data-as-culture-2012

www.WeNeedUs.org

The open web is the most successful information architecture in history

1969- internet (first ARPANET link)

1989- web of documents 2009- web of data

* Launch of data.gov.uk

The global information network affects everyone

Structured → machine readable Addressable → shareable URLs Traceable → documented sources Maintained → updated

What is good open data?

The robust, quality mark for open data

Helps publishers certify their own data

Helps users search, discover and use it

Helps policy makers benchmark

http://certificates.theODI.org

Examples of open data innovation

Convened domain-experts + health & data analytics + communications

Analysed 35m records

+ all the data & clinical facts National & international reach

+ Economist & FT + broadsheets & tabloid press + cited in G8 & govt. reports

http://theodi.org/stories

Innovative open insight + Mapped the biggest US banks + Groundbreaking visualisation + Enables new financial analysis Aggregated and cleaned data + Extracted from huge PDFs + Over 900 pages + Combined with public data Featured internationally + Wired + GigaOm Development opportunities + Map network changes + Find patterns and trends

http://theodi.org/stories

Convened domain-experts + P2P lenders + Banking professionals + Data analytics (ODI) + Communications (ODI)

Analysed 14m records

+ All the data (i.e. not a model) + Anonymised and analysed + ODI analytics & research

National & international reach + Front-page Financial Times

Development opportunities

+ Data intensive & policy-light + Create real-time view + Stimulate market http://theodi.org/stories

Convened domain experts + Entrepreneur think-tanks + Federation of small businesses + Government procurement Analysed and cleaned data + 350,000 EU tenders + 38 million UK transactions + 1.8m documents + 9,000 CSVs National reach + Front-page Daily Telegraph (Business Section) Development opportunities + Discover & address issues + Predictive bid analytics

http://theodi.org/stories

Convened domain experts + Fire service + Smart-steps intelligence (Telefonica)

+ Data analytics (ODI) Real-time big data processing + 509,000 incidents over (4y+) + 120,000 network stations + 600,000,000 location records 1 expert analysis tool + Making cities smarter + View impact on people, the borough, and whole city

http://theodi.org/stories

Readiness Political, social and economic. Government, entrepreneurs, business, citizens, civil society. Implementation Measuring progress on 14 core datasets (e.g. land, spending, transport, crime, health) Impact Analysis of positive political, social and environmental impact, and economic change.

http://theodi.org/stories

Internal user-engagement → improve usage, usability, and utility → reveal efficiencies & innovation

External user-engagement → more users == unlocked demand → diversifies use-cases → improves quality and utility of supply

Open data benefits both internal and external users

→ re-use, build upon, combine → create new uses → create new markets

Open data stimulates open innovation

Publisher

Service

Users

Feedback

Reliable Comprehensive Secure

The open data supply-chain is emerging

Interpret Integrate Analyse

Organize Quality Maintain

Improve quality

About the ODI

ODI Global Network: the open data supply-chain

Learning Membership

Franchise

Businesses Universities Non-profits Governments Individuals

Accreditation Training trainers Training people

Global network of members and trainers

ODI Innovation Unit: evidence, standards & tools

Services

Evidence

Strategic projects Startup incubation Specific programmes

Applied research Standards Tools

Sector-specific papers Policy recommendations Public stories

R&D

Global Network + Innovation = Impact

Innovation Evidence Services

Standards Tools

People Organisations Capabilities Use-cases Solutions

Impact

Increased adoption & investment

Trainers trained

Organisations & people enabled

Increased innovation & evidence

Value communicated

ODI is helping build the global open data sector

Global Network – learning, membership, franchise

Innovation Unit – services, evidence, R&D

Core – strategy, environment, culture

“train the world’s political and national leaders” Multi-year World Bank programme

Public, private and 3rd sector ambitions are aligned

Over 100 corporate members and growing

Environment

Strategy Vision Mission Sustainable model

Culture Brand Web Events

Team Tools Space

ODI Core: world-class operations & delivery

Leadership team Jeni Tennison OBE Technical Director Richard Stirling International Director Louise Burke Finance & Compliance Simon Bullmore Learning Kathryn Corrick Content Georgia Phillips Membership Tom Heath Evidence James Smith R&D Emma Thwaites Communications Michelle Prescott People Jade Croucher Operations

ODI board & co-founders Sir Tim Berners-Lee President Sir Nigel Shadbolt Chairman Gavin Starks CEO + leading industry & public-sector experts HQ (LONDON)40 FTE + 20 Associates GLOBAL NETWORK 20 operational franchises in 13 countries

http://theodi.org/stories

The ODI franchise

ODI Nodes

Businesses + Universities + NGOs

ODI Nodes connect the organizations that wish to develop the open data community

Supporting local, national and international impact

Gavin Starks CEO gavin@theODI.org

@agentGav

Addressing global challenges with open data