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Project funded by the European Commission within the Seventh Framework Programme (2007 – 2013)
Collaborative Project
LOD2 – Creating Knowledge out of Interlinked Data
Deliverable 11.4.2: Organization of a
Workshop and Networking Event
Targeted at other EU-Funded Projects
Dissemination Level Public
Due Date of Deliverable Month 36, 31/08/2013
Actual Submission Date Month 37, 07/09/2013
Work Package WP11 Exploitation and Standardization
Task T11.4
Type Report
Approval Status Approved
Version v1.0
Number of Pages 82 pages
Filename LOD2_D11.4.2_NetworkingEvents.pdf
Abstract: This deliverable gives an overview of several exploitation activities organized and executed by the LOD2 consortium in project year three.
The information in this document reflects only the author’s views and the European Community is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein. The information in this document is provided “as is” without guarantee or warranty of any kind, express or implied, including but not limited to the fitness of the information for a particular purpose. The user thereof uses the information at his/ her sole risk and liability.
Project Number: 257943 Start Date of Project: 01/09/2010 Duration: 48 months
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History Version Date Reason Revised by 0.1 11/06/2013 Draft Nadine Jänicke
0.2 07/09/2013 Additions by OKFN Sander van der Waal
0.3 07/09/2013 Review Hugh Williams
0.3 07/09/2013 Review Sören Auer
1.0 07/09/2013 Final version Nadine Jänicke
Author List Organisation Name Contact Information
ULEI Nadine Jänicke [email protected]
ULEI Sören Auer [email protected]
OGL Hugh Williams [email protected]
OKFN Sander van der Waal [email protected]
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Executive Summary
In 2013 the LOD2 consortium has again organized a couple of events specifically targeted at the consolidation and establishment of external cooperations. All relevant information about these events has been made available at the corresponding websites and regularly updated:
European Data Forum 2013: http://data-forum.eu/, http://2013.data-forum.eu/
I-Semantics: http://i-semantics.tugraz.at/eu-day
Workshop on Licensing Linked Data: n/a
SABRE 2013: http://sabre2013.infai.org
LSWT 2013: http://aksw.org/Events/2013/LeipzigerSemanticWebTag.html
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Table of Contents
1. EUROPEAN DATA FORUM 2013 ....................................................................................................... 5
2. I-SEMANTICS 2013 .......................................................................................................................... 7
2.1 WORKSHOP ON LICENSING LINKED DATA ............................................................................................. 7
3. SABRE 2013 .................................................................................................................................... 9
3.1 LSWT 2013 .............................................................................................................................................. 9
4. OTHER ACTIVITIES BY LOD2 PARTNERS .......................................................................................... 10
ANNEX I ................................................................................................................................................. 11
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1. EuropeanDataForum2013
The European Data Forum (EDF) 2013 took place on April 9-10, 2013 in Dublin (Ireland) at the Croke park Conference Centre. Initiated by the European Commission and supported by STI International, Digital Repository of Ireland (http://www.dri.ie/) and DERI, NUI Galway (http://www.deri.ie/), EDF was organized as a cross-project cooperation of the FP7-EU projects BIG (http://big-project.eu/), LOD2 (http://lod2.eu/), PlanetData (http://planet-data.eu/), Optique (http://www.optique-project.eu/), envision (http://www.envision-project.eu/), Teleios (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/) and Euclid (http://euclid-project.eu/).
This year’s EDF was intended for data practitioners from industry, research, the public-sector and the community, to discuss the opportunities and challenges of the emerging Big Data Economy in Europe. The event comprised keynotes from global experts in the field, a series of submitted talks, as well as a trends, showcase and live networking sessions. Topics included Linked Data, Open Data, and Big Data, with the aim to bring together all stakeholders involved in the data value chain to exchange ideas and develop actionable roadmaps addressing these challenges and opportunities to strengthen the European data economy and its positioning worldwide.
Overall, EDF attracted 276 participants. Organized and sponsored by, among others, the LOD2 project, some researchers from the LOD2 consortium were intensely involved in the program, leading chairs, giving talks and organizing dissemination activities. In this way, EDF was an opportunity to give greater visibility to the LOD2 project among a wider public and also to make recent outcomes and major results known to specific audiences. The following overview shows in brief the LOD2 involvement:
Partner Name Involvement ULEI Sören Auer Organization Committee
SWCG Martin Kaltenböck Organization Committee & Dissemination Chair Tenforce Bastiaan Deblieck Selected Speakers: Who remembers EDP?
OKFN Sander van der Waal Talk: A one-stop shop for Open Government Data: publicdata.eu improved with social features and more linked data sets
For OKFN’s presentation, this was a great opportunity to showcase some of the work that has been done as part of WP9, especially on the portal to add social features and better support for RDF. All of these developments are part of the open source CKAN project, an open source data management system that provides access to open, freely reusable datasets from local, regional and national public bodies across Europe. The track was an excellent platform to highlight how development on publicdata.eu has provided an excellent platform for citizens to find data published by their local, regional or national government, and how new features have enabled citizens to stay further engaged with their governments, by providing the opportunity to ‘follow’ datasets of a certain topic, to preview datasets straight from the web page without the need to download it, and to create useful visualisations as well. The full session was recorded and can be watched at videolectures.net.
The dissemination effect for the complete conference is well documented by the PR activities and their impact (see also http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area). A diversity of PR material (such as leaflet, videos, photos and logo) was created to promote the event widely. Many marketing channels were used for promotion, including:
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Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/lod2/sets/72157633288879812/), Twitter: https://twitter.com/EUDataForum, LinkedIn Group: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/European-Data-Forum-4356346, Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/EuropeanDataForum, Google+: http://plus.google.com/103813901923608956761, YouTube Playlist
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iYswsLDBSA&list=PLcyvKLe4w9ExYVWS5RIvGZReIc1_nz2fS&feature=player_embedded) and
Slideshare (http://www.slideshare.net/EUDataForum).
Press releases in different languages (e.g. English, German, Dutch) were published and circulated, particularly by LOD2 partners (e.g. SWCG, ULEI and CWI), across Europe. As a result, numerous press responses also appeared, raising further awareness for EDF and its special focus on Big Data and the emerging Data Economy.
April 2013, (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWnPihz_gMk) 16.4.2013, OKF Blog (http://blog.okfn.org/2013/04/16/open-data-highlights-from-european-data-
forum-2013-in-dublin/) 27.02.2013, pressBox
(http://www.pressbox.co.uk/detailed/Technology/European_Data_Forum_2013_1109081.html) 27.02.2013, openPR (http://www.openpr.com/news/253293.html) 25.02.2013, brainmachine (http://brainmachine.mozganostroj.com/2013/02/25/european-data-
forum-2013-your-data-our-data-big-data/) 15.02.2013, LT-Innovate (http://ltinnovate.blogspot.be/2013/01/european-data-forum-free-
registration.html) 22.1.2013, Germany, Perspektive Mittelstand (http://www.perspektive-mittelstand.de/European-
Data-Forum-2013-Bildung-einer-europaeischen-Big-Data-Community/pressemitteilung/59152.html) 22.1.2013, Germany, fluidOperations (http://www.fluidops.com/2013/01/22/european-data-forum-
2013-2/?lang=de) 22.1.2013, Ireland, DRI (http://dri.ie/edf2013)
Annex I contains more material on EDF including press releases by LOD2 members, the EDF program and a post-event analysis by members of the organization committee with a focus on attendance, sponsorship, funding opportunities and processes of program planning.
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2. I‐Semantics2013
The I-SEMANTICS 2013 (www.i-semantics.at) is the 9th International Conference on Semantic Systems. With more than 400 participants every year I-SEMANTICS is also one of the largest Semantic Web conferences in Europe. The conference brings together both researchers and practitioners in the areas of Semantic Technologies, Linked Data and the Semantic Web in order to showcase cutting edge research, demonstrators and applications for the Corporate and Social Semantic Web. Being a forum of exchange for leading European research institutions and businesses, the I-Semantics attracts international experts to discuss state-of-the-art developments and future trends from the technological, economical and social view and to present up-to-the-minute research & development in semantic systems.
The I-Semantics 2013 took place from September 4, 2013 to September 6, 2013 in Graz, Austria. In order to foster synergies among the research fields of knowledge discovery, social computing, and semantic technologies, this year’s I-SEMANTICS Conference was held together with the I-KNOW Conference, the 13th International Conference on Knowledge Technologies (www.i-know.at). As in the past years, this cooperation was inspired by the increasing importance and convergence of knowledge management and semantic systems.
As a conference aiming to bring together science and industry, I-SEMANTICS encourages scientific research and application-oriented contributions. The topics of interest for the 2013 conference included the following:
The Web of Data Quality of Semantic Data on the Web Corporate Semantic Web Social Semantic Web Semantic Content Engineering Semantic Multimedia Studies, Metrics & Benchmarks Data Ecosystems & Markets
All information on the I-Semantics conference can be found at: http://i-semantics.tugraz.at/
Annex I contains more material on the conference including a press release, an online article by futurezone.at and the program.
As a major platform in the field of Semantic Web research, I-Semantics was a great opportunity to present the LOD2 project and its major technological results achieved so far among a wider expert audience. Apart from individual talks by LOD2 members (e.g. Ivan Ermilov on User-Driven Semantic Mapping of Tabular Data, ULEI; Amrapali Zaveri on User-Driven Quality Evaluation of DBpedia, ULEI), the project was presented through a synergy workshop within the framework of the EU Day of the I-Semantics.
2.1 Workshop on Licensing Linked Data
The workshop organized by Christian Dirschl (WKD) and Tassilo Pellegrini (Technical College St. Pölten & SWCG) dealt primarily with the topic of licensing linked data as taken into focus in WP7 of the LOD2 project. The EU Day track offered EU-projects the opportunity to disseminate its exploitable results to
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industry and investors, to discuss project results in a community of like-minded projects and to explore synergies. This year’s EU Day invited project leaders to:
host a synergy workshop at I-Know 2013 and bring together like-minded (EU-) projects to present and discuss project results, directions and research challenges.
meet commission representatives of related units to discuss project results and get the newest developments on Horizon 2020.
demonstrate project results to approximately 250 industry participants and 250 research participants throughout the three-day conference.
test the exploitability of project results by presenting them to investment organizations such as business angels Austria and receiving their rating and feedback.
Each synergy workshop was addressing one major research challenge (e.g. big data, smart media, etc.) with one project being the hosting project and 4-6 projects being the participating projects. That is, the hosting projects set the agenda and invited participating projects to take part in the event and set the stage for dissemination and exploitation activities. In a nutshell, hosting projects benefitted from:
organizing and setting the agenda of a synergy workshop with like-minded projects in a comfortable venue
disseminating project results to industry & science participants (about 50% of I-Know participants are from industry) either in form of simple posters/demos or by having a full-fledged booth
testing the exploitability of project results by presenting demos and getting feedback from investment organizations (e.g. business angels) as well as from industry participants
Likewise, hosting projects benefitted from publicity via I-KNOW/I-SEMANTICS WebSite by having their logo included in the “sponsors” category, and a project description as part of the proceedings and online conference site, a project poster or banner could also be displayed during the conference.
Thus, the workshop was facilitating the dissemination of major LOD2 findings within a diverse circle of experts and interested parties. Its major focus is briefly summarized in the following abstract and in the comprehensive workshop presentation attached to this document in Annex 1:
Data licensing is a crucial step in building business around your data assets. This workshop gives an introduction into the property rights issues of data and gives recommendations how to develop a sustainable data licensing policy.
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3. SABRE20133.1 LSWT 2013
Another effort aiming at networking and collaborating with other projects and industry in the areas covered by LOD2 is made with the organization of the Leipzig Semantic Web Day (LSWT) 2013 in the framework of the SABRE 2013 conference. Conceptualized as an international multi-conference, SABRE comprises several conferences, workshops and tutorials which mainly focus on innovative architectures, methods and concepts of software development for business, research and e-sciences. This multi-conference takes place from September 23, 2013 to September 25, 2013.
Since 2009 the LSWT has offered an exclusive opportunity for companies, academia and public organizations to exchange views on semantic technologies and to get in touch with business and research partners from the German-speaking world. Many companies have gradually deployed semantic web technologies to a greater and greater extent within the past years. Especially the Linked Data Paradigm has evolved from a research-centred theme into a number of industry-relevant technologies and applications.
This year's LSWT will take place on September 23 and 24, 2013 as part of the SABRE multi-conference and focuses on the presentation of these technologies via talks, demonstrations and tutorials held by experts from industry and academia. The first day of the LSWT (23rd September) will consist of various talks and keynotes which are followed by an evening event. Tutorials as a means of knowledge transfer will take place on the second day (24th September) and aim at an in-depth analysis of the core topics.
Within the framework of the LSWT’s main theme "From Big Data to Smart Data" the following topics shall be covered:
Interconnection of public data of administrations and governments: Transparency for citizens and valorization for enterprises and economy,
BigData and the Semantic Web: Scalability of databases and data integration within enterprises,
Unlocking the Semantics of Text: text analysis within the semantic web
The event is widely promoted and event details are regularly updated through the following media channels:
AKSW Blog (http://blog.aksw.org/) Twitter Tag: #LSWT2013 (https://twitter.com/search/realtime?q=%23LSWT2013) Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/events/445578762204541/) Program via Google ICal
(https://www.google.com/calendar/ical/9j1htafari6eh9mvg1odcgnf28%40group.calendar.google.com/private-3929ab1664f2d184068135993c157f59/basic.ics)
All information on the LSWT 2013 event can be found at: http://aksw.org/Events/2013/LeipzigerSemanticWebTag.html
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4. OtherActivitiesbyLOD2Partners
Expanding publicdata.eu towards a more pan-European portal
OKFN was invited to attend a meeting of the Public Sector Information sub-Group on the pan-European Open Data portal in Luxembourg on 18 June 2013 to present work done in WP 9 on publicdata.eu, the prototype of a pan-European open data portal.
This was an excellent opportunity to talk with representatives of 19 EU across Europe that were at the meeting. Many countries already have an open data portal or have just set one up, ranging from countries like Germany and France, to Austria and Slovakia. Some of these are already integrated in the pan-European publicdata.eu, but we also found out about portals that we were not aware of. Our presentation focused on some of the key areas we are working on at the Open Knowledge Foundation.
Integrate more portals into publicdata.eu: As more official open data portals are being built, we are working to integrate those into publicdata.eu. Countries are increasingly publishing their government data under open licenses, and many were keen to have their data integrated in the pan-European portal that we are prototyping.
Increase use of the data: As part of the Apps for Europe project the Open Knowledge Foundation are working with initiatives that stimulate innovative use of the data, such as via organising hackathons or app competitions. The goal of that project is to connect promising application developers to potential investors, and ensure that the data that is being published will be used successfully.
Work on standards for open data portals: The European Commission has funded the Open Data Support project to improve the visibility and facilitate the access to datasets published in open data portals. They initiated the working group that aims to develop a DCAT application profile for data portals in Europe. This will enable cross-data portal search for data sets and make public sector data better searchable across borders and sectors, in particular for data portals that are not based on the CKAN software that we develop and which runs publicdata.eu.
It was a very fruitful day in Luxembourg which helped us further expand the harvesting of open data portals into publicdata.eu.
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AnnexI
EDF2013 – http://2013.data-forum.eu
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Press information 26.02.2013 for immediate release
European Data Forum 2013 Discussing the challenges and opportunities of data intense sectors in an emerging European data economy
The European Data Forum (EDF) is an annual meeting place for industry, researchers, policy makers, and community initiatives to discuss the challenges and opportunities of (Big) Data in Europe.
What do the following organisations have in common?
An oil company dealing with complex engineering technologies and strong marketing intelligence needs, a publisher establishing new innovative content businesses, an NGO building global awareness on sustainable development or a national government enabling more transparency and realising cost savings at the same time.
All of these organisations are working in data intense sectors and thereby facing the challenge of how to deal with an efficient and sustainable (big) data management as a key factor for success as well as competitive advantage!
‘Data has swept into every industry and business function and is now an important factor of production, alongside labour and capital.’ a study by the McKinsey Global Institute stated in May 2011 (see: study details). ‘The amount of data in our world has been exploding, and analysing large datasets — so-called big data — will become a key basis of competition, underpinning new waves of productivity growth, innovation, and consumer surplus.’
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These challenges and opportunities around big data management, the single steps of the data value chain, technological innovations and innovative business models, as well as the legal framework for a sustainable European data economy will be discussed at the European Data Forum 2013, the meeting place for a growing EU-wide Data Community.
The Event will take place on 09-10 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland (at the Croke Park Conference Centre), as an associated event of the Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU.
Programme and Registration, Travel Support
With prestigious Keynote Speakers (Knut Sebastian Tungland (Chief Engineer IT at Statoil), Richard Benjamins (Director of Business Intelligence at Telefonica Digital), Fiona Williams (Research Director at Ericsson)), a moderated CIO discussion panel with participants of Daimler, Telefonica, SAP (tbc) or ATOS, technology-, academic-, open data- and best practise presentations by invited and selected experts and last but not least a comprehensive exhibition/demo, the EDF2013 programme contains something for everyone.
See the EDF2013 programme information for further details: http://2013.data-forum.eu/program.
Registration and participation in the European Data Forum 2013 is free of charge: http://2013.data-forum.eu/registration. There is also an opportunity for financial travel support (mainly for SMEs and NGO/NPO) - please see the respective EDF2013 website for further details: http://2013.data-forum.eu/conference-venue/edf2013-travel-grant.
Register today as the space at the EDF2013 is limited to 300 participants and more then 50% of the tickets are already booked!
European Data Innovator Award
In order to recognize outstanding enterprises and individuals, who have shown extraordinary vision and execution in the field of linked enterprise data management for their use of linked (open) data to start more efficient data management, EDF2013 is delighted to launch the European Data Innovator Award. The 2013 European Data Innovator award was made possible by eccenca, a spin-off of Brox IT Solutions and AKSW Research group from University of Leipzig.
See more information here: http://bit.ly/EDF2013-Data-Innovator-Award
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Call for Exhibits
The EDF2013 Exhibition Area is an outstanding opportunity to showcase the advances you have made to solve real-world Big Data challenges in the marketplace of tomorrow. We solicit exhibits showcasing deliverables. Whether commercial products or academic contributions, the most interesting exhibits for this forum are those that are polished and ready to be exploited by others in their ventures. Submission will be reviewed by the Organization Committee of the Forum according to their relevance to the scope and purpose of the event and based on their novelty and maturity for adoption. The deadline for submissions is: 11th Mar 2013, 02.00pm CET. Accepted exhibitions will be
notified on 15th Mar 2013
See all exhibits detail here: http://2013.data-forum.eu/call-for-exhibits
Become a Sponsor
EDF 2013 will be a focal point for the top leaders and advocates of Big Data technology and will present a key opportunity to increase the visibility of your company or organization. Spread your message through advertising and networking to a wide range of attendees within the Big Data industry, researchers, policy makers and users alike. A number of sponsorship and media packages are available. More information on how to become a sponsor is available on the website (http://2013.data-forum.eu/join/sponsor-information).
Join the European Data Community!
The Organising Team of the EDF2013 is looking forward to seeing you in Dublin in April.
------------------------------- End of official press release -------------------------------
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EDF2013 Facts
What: European Data Forum 2013 (EDF2013) Where: Croke Park Conference Centre in Dublin, Ireland When: April 9 to 10, 2013 More Information: http://2013.data-forum.eu/ Registration (EDF2013 is free of charge): http://2013.data-forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-contribution/registration Twitter: https://twitter.com/EUDataForum , hashtag: #EDF2013 Press Area: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area LinkedIn Group: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/European-Data-Forum-4356346 Get in touch: [email protected]
The European Data Forum 2013 is a joint activity of the EC projects:
LOD2 (http://lod2.eu/)
BIG (http://big-project.eu/)
PlanetData (http://planet-data.eu/)
Optique (http://www.optique-project.eu/)
envision (http://www.envision-project.eu/) and
TELEIOS (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/)
EUCLID (http://euclid-project.eu/)
The EDF2013 is supported by the European Commission as well as by the Digital Repository of Ireland (http://www.dri.ie/), STI International (http://www.sti2.org/) and DERI, NUI Galway (http://www.deri.ie/). EDF2013 is an associated event of the Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU (http://www.eu2013.ie/).
If you have any questions, feel free to contact us and we will follow-up with you.
EDF 2013 Press Contacts
EDF2013 Dissemination Chair Martin Kaltenböck, Semantic Web Company, Austria Email: [email protected]
EDF2013 Local Dissemination Chair Deirdre Lee (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Tel. +353 91 495336 Fax +353 91 495541 Email: [email protected]
EDF2013 Press Area: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area
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Pressemeldung 22.01.2013 zur sofortigen Veröffentlichung
European Data Forum 2013 Bildung einer europäischen Big Data Community
Auf dem European Data Forum (EDF) treffen sich jedes Jahr Vertreter aus der Industrie, Wissenschaftler, Entscheidungsträger aus der Politik und Vertreter von Community-Initiativen und erörtern Herausforderungen und Möglichkeiten von (Big) Data in Europa.
Das nächste EDF findet vom 9. bis 10. April in Dublin, Irland, statt. Das Konferenzprogramm besteht aus Vorträgen von und Networking-Gesprächen mit führenden Unternehmen, Wissenschaftlern, Entscheidungsträgern aus der Politik und Community-Organisatoren über eine breitgefächerte Themenauswahl rund um die wachsende Data Economy in Europa. Dazu zählen Forschung und Technologieentwicklung, Training und Wissensvermittlung sowie Vermarktung.
Antonio Tajani, Vizepräsident der Europäischen Kommission hat kürzlich den European Entrepreneurship Action Plan auf den Weg gebracht, der den Zugang zu Open Data und Big Data als ein MUSS bezeichnet. Er erklärt, dass zu wichtigen Investitionen in digitale Technologien in Europa keine Alternativen bestehen. Diese Aussagen und Zusagen von Neelie Kroess, EU-Kommissarin für die Digitale Agenda, und anderen ist ein klares Signal für den Start einer europäischen Big Data Community.
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Die Data Community sorgt dafür, dass vielversprechende Ideen und Innovationen den Übergang vom Stadium der wissenschaftlichen Fragestellung hin zur erfolgreichen Beschaffung von Kapital und damit erfolgreichen und nachhaltigen Realisierung schaffen. Gleichzeitig treiben die Stakeholder der Data Community nun Wirtschaftsstrategien voran, die einer zukunftsorientieren, dynamischen und europaweit gut integrierten (Daten) Industrie bedürfen, um eine nachhaltige Datenwirtschaft zu ermöglichen.
Diese Community arbeitet zwar an ihrem eigenen Erfolg, sie muss aber auch diverse strategische Fragen beantworten:
Ist die europäische Wirtschaft bereit für Big Data? Was ist die Innovation und wie sehen Business-Modelle für Open und Linked Data aus? Welche Plattformen, Märkte, Richtlinien und Strategien für die Entwicklung von Daten-Ökosystemen sollten adressiert werden?
Werden relevante Stakeholder erreicht? Erfüllen die Anwendungsszenarien sowie die technischen und nicht-technischen Konzepte für Big Data-Provider und -Nutzer die Anforderungen an Themen wie Smart Cities, Umweltforschung, Geoinformationen, eScience und Social Media?
Was bietet Europa an Business Intelligence-Lösungen? Wie passt die Community optimal in europäische Forschungspläne und Fahrpläne für die Wissenschaft, Technologie und Innovation, insbesondere im Hinblick auf Forschungsrahmenprogramme wie Horizon2020? Welche Rahmenbedingungen müssen für Europas Streben nach einer profitablen Wirtschaft gegeben sein, in der Daten eine der wichtigsten Rollen spielen und die dem künftigen Normierungsbedarf und den Vermarktungsmöglichkeiten Rechnung trägt?
Daten und Fakten EDF2013
Was: European Data Forum 2013 (EDF 2013) Wo: Croke Park Conference Centre in Dublin, Irland Wann: 9. bis 10. April 2013 Weitere Informationen: http://2013.data-forum.eu/ Registrierung (Die Teilnahme an dem EDF 2013 ist kostenlos): http://2013.data-forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-contribution/registration Twitter: https://twitter.com/EUDataForum , hashtag: #EDF2013 Pressebereich: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area LinkedIn Gruppe: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/European-Data-Forum-4356346 E-Mail: [email protected]
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Programm und Call for Contribution
Neben fixen Keynote Speakern und eingeladenen Vortragenden werden mittels eines „Call for Contribution“ inspirierende Vorträge für das Programm des EDF2013 gesucht, welche technische, anwendungsbezogene, sozio-ökonomische und/oder politisch relevante Aspekte rund um die Thematik (Big) Data Management und Datenanalyse behandeln. Das EDF-Organisationskomitee (http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/organizers) evaluiert die eingereichten Vorschläge und prüft die Relevanz für das Forum.
Interessierte Vortragende finden weitere Informationen im „Call for Contribution“, dem Aufruf zur Einreichung von Vorträgen unter: http://bit.ly/EDF2013-CfC. Spätester Einreichtermin für Vortragsvorschläge ist der 22. Februar 2013 um 14.00 Uhr MEZ.
Registrierung - Travel Support - Sponsoring
Die Registrierung zur Veranstaltung ist bereits geöffnet, die Teilnahme am European Data Forum 2013 ist kostenlos, siehe: http://2013.data-forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-contribution/registration. Interessierte können um Reisekostenunterstützung (Travel Support) ansuchen – diese Unterstützung ist allerdings nur in beschränktem Umfang und vor allem für KMUs (Kleine und Mittlere Unternehmen), sowie NGO & NPOs möglich. Weitere Informationen hierzu finden Sie auf der EDF2013 Webseite.
Unternehmen und Organisationen, welche sich aktiv am EDF2013 beteiligen bzw. exklusiv präsentieren wollen, finden Informationen für Sponsoren auf der EDF2013 Website oder können direkt mit den beiden Sponsor Chairs: Nuria De-Lama Sanchez und/oder Elena Simperl Kontakt aufnehmen.
Das EDF2013 ist eine gemeinsame Veranstaltung folgender EU geförderter Projekte:
BIG (http://big-project.eu/)
LOD2 (http://lod2.eu/)
PlanetData (http://planet-data.eu/)
Optique (http://www.optique-project.eu/)
envision (http://www.envision-project.eu/) und
TELEIOS (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/).
Die Europäische Kommission, das Digital Repository of Ireland (http://www.dri.ie/), STI International (http://www.sti2.org/) und DERI (http://www.deri.ie/) unterstützen das EDF2013. Das European Data Forum 2013 ist eine Veranstaltung unter der Schirmherrschaft der irischen EU-Ratspräsidentschaft (http://www.eu2013.ie/).
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EDF2013 Pressekontakte
EDF2013 Hauptverantwortlicher für die Kommunikation Martin Kaltenböck (Semantic Web Company, Wien, Österreich) E-Mail: [email protected]
EDF 2013 Lokale Ansprechpartnerin für die Kommunikation Deirdre Lee (DERI, NUI Galway, Irland) Tel. : +353 91 495336 Fax: +353 91 495541 E-Mail: [email protected]
EDF2013 Pressebereich: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area
EDF2013 – http://2013.data-forum.eu
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Informatie voor pers 22.01.2013 Mag onmiddellijk gecommuniceerd worden.
European Data Forum 2013 De Europese Big Data gemeenschap groeit echt!
Het Europese Data Forum (EDF) is een jaarlijkse bijeenkomst van industrie, onderzoekers, beleidsmakers en onafhankelijke gemeenschapsinitiatieven om de uitdagingen en kansen voor (Big) Data in Europa te bekijken.
De volgende editie van het EDF zal in Dublin, Ierland gehouden worden op 9-10 april, 2013. Het programma bestaat uit presentaties en netwerksessies door leiders uit de industrie, academici, beleidsmakers en onafhankelijke initiatiefnemers. De onderwerpen zijn zeer gevarieerd en betreffen o.a. onderzoek, technologische ontwikkeling, opleiding, kennisoverdracht en commercialisatie.
De vice-president van de Europese Commissie, Antonio Tajani lanceerde recent het Actieplan Ondernemerschap 2020. Dit plan wijst naar de toegang tot Open Data en Big Data als een must en stel dat “Investeren in digitale technologieën niet langer een keuze”is. Na de initiatieven van Neelie Kroes (in verband met Open Data, bijvoorbeeld) is dit weer een duidelijk signaal voor de Europese Digital economie.
EDF2013 – http://2013.data-forum.eu
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De juiste samenwerkingsverbanden zullen ervoor zorgen dat veelbelovende ideeën van het onderzoeksstadium naar een succesvolle aanvaarding en investeringen zal leiden. Tegelijkertijd zullen de betrokken partijen elkaars commerciële strategieën verstreken in deze europese industrie die dynamisch, toekomstgericht is en zeer geïntegreerd werkt.
Terwijl deze sector werkt aan het succes, zijn er nog een aantal strategische vragen op te lossen:
Is de Europese economie klaar voor Big Data? Wat zijn de meest recente innovaties en business modellen voor Open Data en Linked Data? Welke platformen, markten, richtlijnen en strategieën voor ogen hebben bij het opzetten van een data ecosysteem?
Worden de juiste partijen betrokken? Passen de applicatiescenario’s en technische of niet technische concepten in verband met Big Data leveranciers en consumenten binnen thema’s zoals smart cities, milieu, georuimtelijk informatie, eScience en social media?
Welk innovatieve Business Intelligence oplossingen biedt Europa aan? Hoe kan de sector het best aansluiten bij de Europese onderzoeksagenda (zoals Horizon 2012) en draaiboeken voor wetenschap, technologie en innovatie? En welke omgevingsfactoren, zoals standardisatie en commerciële mogelijkheden, zijn essentieel om de Europese ambities tot een winstgevende data economie te realiseren?
EDF2013 Feiten
Wat: European Data Forum 2013 (EDF2013) Waar: Croke Park Conference Centre in Dublin, Ireland Wanneer: April 9 to 10, 2013 Meer informatie: http://2013.data-forum.eu/ Registratie (EDF2013 is gratis): http://2013.data-forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-contribution/registration Twitter: https://twitter.com/EUDataForum , hashtag: #EDF2013 Pers: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area LinkedIn Groep: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/European-Data-Forum-4356346 Contact: [email protected]
EDF2013 – http://2013.data-forum.eu
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Programma en oproep tot deelname
We zijn op zoek naar inspirerende presentaties die de volgende topics in verband met Big Data beheer en analyse behandelen: technologie, appliacties, socio-economie, beleid, ... De presentaties kunnen variëren in formaat en focus, afhankelijk van het verwachtte publiek en de presentatoren. Voorstellen zullen beoordeeld worden door een commissie van de organisatie van het Europese Data Forum (http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/organizers) op basis van de relevantie voor het domein en de doelstelling van het evenement.
Ben je geïnteresseerd om deel te nemen als gastspreker voor EDF2013, lees dan de oproep tot
deelname (in het Engels) http://2013.data-forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-
contribution en lever je voorstel voor een presentatie in vóór 22 februari 2013 (14:00 CET).
Registratie – Reizen - Sponsoring
Registratie en deelname aan het Europese Data Forum 2013 is gratis http://2013.data-
forum.eu/news/european-data-forum-2013-call-contribution/registration. Er zijn beperkte
mogelijkheden voor reisvergoedingen. Deze zijn voornamelijk bedoeld voor KMO’s, NGO’s en
NPO’s. Gelieve de EDF2013 website te volgen voor meer details.
Wil je nauwer betrokken zijn bij de organisatie van het Europese Data Forum 2013 gelieve dan
de sponsorinformatie op EDF2013 website te bekijken en/of neem contact op met de
sponsorverantwoordelijken: Nuria De Lama Sanchez en/of Elena Simperl.
Het Europese Data Forum 2013 is een gemeenschappelijk initiatief van de volgende EC
projecten:
BIG (http://big-project.eu/)
LOD2 (http://lod2.eu/)
PlanetData (http://planet-data.eu/)
Optique (http://www.optique-project.eu/)
envision (http://www.envision-project.eu/) and
TELEIOS (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/)
Het EDF 2013 wordt gesteund door de Europese Commissie en door het Digital Repository of
Ireland (http://www.dri.ie/), STI International (http://www.sti2.org/) en DERI, NUI Galway
(http://www.deri.ie/). EDF2013 is verbonden met het Iers voorzitterschap van de Raad van de
EU (http://www.eu2013.ie/).
Contacteer ons als je vragen hebt.
Het EDF2013 team hoopt je te ontmoeten in Dublin, Ierland in April!
EDF2013 – http://2013.data-forum.eu
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EDF 2013 Perscontacten
EDF2013 persverantwoordelijke Martin Kaltenböck, Semantic Web Company, Austria Email: [email protected]
EDF2013 locale persverantwoordelijke Deirdre Lee (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Tel. +353 91 495336 Fax +353 91 495541 Email: [email protected]
EDF2013 Pers: http://2013.data-forum.eu/about/press-area
Organised by:
Welcome to the European Data Forum (EDF), the annual meeting-point for data practitioners from industry, research, and the public-sector to discuss the opportunities and challenges of the emerging Big Data Economy in Europe.
European Data Forum 2013 April 9 - 10, Dublin, Ireland
EDF 2013 takes place in the Croke Park Convention Centre, Dublin, Ireland
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Organisers
Conference Chairs
Michael Hausenblas (MapR Technologies/DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Elena Simperl (University of Southampton, UK)
Local Chairs
Deirdre Lee (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland)
Organization Committee
Sören Auer (University of Leipzig, Germany) Francesco Barbato (European Commission) Sandra Collins (Digital Repository of Ireland, Royal Irish Academy, Ireland) Stefan Decker (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) Nuria De-Lama Sanchez (ATOS, Spain) Pieter De Leenheer (VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Dieter Fensel (University of Innsbruck, Austria) Marko Grobelnik (Jozef Stefan Institute, Slovenia) Peter Haase (fluid Operations AG, Germany) Martin Kaltenböck (Semantic Web Company, Austria) Manolis Koubarakis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece) Rasmus Pedersen (Copenhagen Business School, Denmark) Dumitru Roman (SINTEF/University of Oslo, Norway) Arild Waaler (University of Oslo, Norway) Kjetil Kjernsmo (University of Oslo, Norway)
Dissemination Chair
Martin Kaltenböck (Semantic Web Company, Austria)
Exhibition Chair
Kjetil Kjernsmo (University of Oslo, Norway)
Useful Information
Wifi SSID: crokepark wifi Twitter: @EUDataForum #edf_13
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Welcome to Dublin! Fáilte go Baile Átha Cliath!
The European Data Forum (EDF) is the yearly meeting place for industry, research, policy makers, and the community of practioners to discuss the challenges and opportunities of Big Data and Open Data in Europe. We cover technical aspects, in terms of technology needed to master the volumes, heterogeneity, and dynamicity of Big Data, as well as a socio-economic aspects, addressing emerging types of products and services and their commercialisation,
innovation and business models, and also reflecting on policies and regulations. Our aim is to bring together all stakeholders involved in the data value chain to exchange ideas and develop actionable roadmaps addressing these challenges and opportunities to strengthen the European data economy and its positioning worldwide.
An important goal of the EDF2013 is to foster a truly European Big Data community. This
emerging community will enable promising ideas to move from the stage of research questions all the way to successful deployment and the acquisition of capital; in the same time, its stakeholders will mutually reinforce commercial strategies that require a forward looking, dynamic, and well-integrated EU-wide venture capital and industry.
Following a successful launch in 2012, this year's edition of the EDF offers a rich
program consisting of keynotes, panels, invited and selected talks, networking sessions, tutorials and more – to highlight a few of them:
Opening message by Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission
The Executive Panel on Big Data with participants from Telefonica, Daimler, Exalead, Siemens, and EMC
The European Data Innovator Award
Sessions from 'Challenges of the Data Economy' over 'The power of Open Data' to 'Research and Technology'
But we don't stop there. In addition to the above, EDF2013 offers an Exhibition Space
with many exciting demos and the possibility to interact with leading vendors, research groups and SMEs from all over Europe.
As General Chairs we'd like to thank the Local Organiser Deirdre Lee (DERI) and her
team for the fantastic work on the ground, our Dissemination Chair Martin Kaltenböck (Semantic Web Company) for his awesome work getting the word out, the Exhibition Chair Kjetil Kjernsmo for coordinating the great exhibition space, as well as the Organisation Committee at large for their support and advice. Last but not least we thank the European Commission services and our sponsors without whom this event would simply not have taken place. Thank you all and enjoy EDF2013!
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Day I – Tue, April 9, 2013
Time Main Track Side Track
08:00 -09:00
Registration & Coffee
09:00 - 09:30
EDF2013 Opening by General Chairs
Elena Simperl, University of Southampton, UK and Michael Hausenblas, DERI Galway, Ireland together with Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit "Data Value Chain" at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology.
Welcome
Video message by Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission, in charge of the Digital Agenda.
Irish Government Representative
Keynote by Roberto Viola, Deputy Director General at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology
Prof. Mark Ferguson, Science Foundation Ireland
09:30 - 10:00
European Data Innovator Award (Presentation)
Roberto Viola, Deputy Director General at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology
H.C. Brockmann (Eccenca) as award sponsor
Talk of European Data Innovator Award Winner
Michael Gorriz, CIO Daimler
10:00 - 11.00
EDF2013 Executive Panel on Big Data
Panellists:
Richard Benjamins, Telefonica Digital
Michael Gorriz, Daimler
François Bourdoncle, Exalead
Gerhard Kress, Siemens
Gary Evans, EMC
Roberto Viola, DG Connect of EC
Moderated by: Dieter Fensel (STI Innsbruck)
11:00 - 11:30
Coffee Break
11:30 - 12:30
Morning Session, Chair: Sören Auer
11:30 - 12:30
Challenges of the Data Economy
Fiona Williams Research Director of Ericsson
Julie Marguerite European research cooperation manager of Thales Title of Talk: NESSI view on big data: a new world of opportunities for software services
Malte Beyer-Katzenberger Policy Officer in DG CONNECT at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology Title of Talk: The legal framework of the data value chain
Francesco Barbato Project Officer at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology Title of Talk: The European Data Value Chain stakeholder platform
Tutorial: Introduction to Big Data
Chair/Speaker: Marko Grobelnik
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Time Main Track Side Track
12.30 - 14:00
Lunch Break &
Presentation of "Futurium - the virtual lab to co-create futures and policy ideas" at the European Commission's DG Connect, by Stefano Bertolo
14:00- 15:45
First Afternoon Session, Chair: Sandra Collins (DRI)
14:00- 14:45
Industry Keynote: Richard Benjamins
Director of Business Intelligence at Telefonica Digital
Title of talk: Big Data - Big Opportunities - Big Risks?
And what about Europe?
14:45 - 15:45
Best Practice Session
Bill Thompson Head of Partnership BBC Archives Title of Talk: Big Data from an Audio Visual Archive perspective
Hjalmar Gislason Founder of datamarket.com Title of talk: Emerging DaaS business models: A case study
Dan Staniaszek Senior Expert, BPIE, Title of Talk: Building the European Knowledge Base on Energy Performance of Buildings
Applications: Earth Sciences
Topic: Big and Open Data Challenges in Earth Sciences
Chair: Manolis Koubarakis
15:45 - 16:15
Coffee Break
16:15 - 17:45
Second Afternoon Session, Chair: Deirdre Lee (DERI)
16:15- 16:45
Keynote: Ingo Brenckmann
Senior Development Manager at SAP HANA
Title of Talk: In-Memory Computing - The need for speed on Big Data
16:45 - 17:45
Challenges of the Irish Data Economy
Daragh O'Brien Castlebridge Associates, Managing Director Title of Talk: The Story of Maturity – How data in Business needs to pass the ‘So What’ tests
Bríd Dooley Head of RTÉ Archives, RTÉ Digital Title of talk: Cross-archival content discovery in the digital landscape; an RTÉ , Digital Repository Ireland and the DERI Research Institute collaboration.
Dominic Byrne Fingal County Council, Assistant Head of Information Technology Title of Talk: Irish Open Data Reuse Exemplars
Technology Session
Chair: Rasmus Pedersen (CBS)
Tyler Tate Title of Talk: Information Wayfinding: The Anthropology of Big Data
Josep-L., Larriba-Pey Title of talk: The Linked Data Benchmark Council, benchmarking RDF and Graph technologies
Bastiaan Deblieck Title of Talk: Who remembers EDP
17:45 - 18:00
Closing Session Day I Stefan Decker (DERI) on Big Data in Ireland
19:00 EDF2013 Dinner
Croke Park Conference Centre: Level 4 in the Hogan Mezzanine
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Day II – Wed, April 10, 2013
Time Main Track Side Track
08.15 - 09.00
Registration & Coffee
09:00- 11.00
First Morning Session, Chair: Pieter De Leenheer (VU Amsterdam)
09:00- 09.15
Opening EDF2013, Day 2
(General Chairs EDF2013)
Elena Simperl & Michael Hausenblas
09:15 - 10.00
Industry Keynote: Knut Sebastian Tungland
Chief Engineer IT at Statoil
Title of talk: Statoil - we need to understand our data
10.00 - 11.00
The Power of Open Data
Florian Bauer Operations & IT Director, REEEP Title of Talk: Unleashing climate and energy knowledge with Linked Open Data and consistent terminology
Malte Beyer-Katzenberger Policy Officer at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology Title of Talk: The EC Open Data Portal (http://open-data.europa.eu)
John Sheridan Head of Legislation Services at The UK National Archives Title of Talk: Good Law from Open Data
Curriculum development:
Towards a data science curriculum for professionals
Chair: John Domingue
11.00 - 11.30
Coffee Break
11.30 - 12.00
Language Technology Panel: Unlocking the Data Treasure Chest
Panellists:
Hans-Ulrich von Freyberg, CEO Cocomore AG
Philippe Wacker, Secretary General LT-Innovate
Hans Uszkoreit, Scientific Director DFKI GmbH
Moderated by Gudrun Magnusdottir, CSO and Chairperson ESTeam
Introduction to the Big Data Public Private Forum (BIG)
Chair: Tilman Becker, DFKI
12.00 - 14.00
Lunch Break
&
Demo & Product Session in Exhibition Space, Chair: Kjetil Kjernsmo
14.00 - 15.45
First Afternoon Session, Chair: Stefan Decker (DERI)
14:00 - 14.45
Keynote: Gerhard Kreß
Director Strategic Transformation at Siemens AG
Title of talk: Siemens: Big Data in industrial applications
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Time Main Track Side Track
14.45 - 15.45
Research and Technology Session
Simon Riggs Title of talk: Practical PostgreSQL
Dave Lewis Title of Talk: Linked Data in the Languages Service Industry
Ghislain Auguste Atemezing, Raphael Troncy Title of Talk: Towards Interoperable Visualization Applications Over Linked Data
Peter Haase Title of Talk: Scalable End-user Access to Big Data
Impact on Big and Open Data
Chair: Edward Curry (DERI)
Astrid Woollard Title of Talk: Fit for purpose? Big Data and Intellectual Property Rights
Bryan Drexler Title of Talk: Does the 80/20 rule also apply to Big Data?
František Nonnemann Title of Talk: Re-use of public sector information and personal data protection
Allan Hanbury Title of Talk: Algorithm any good? A Cloud-based Infrastructure for Evaluation on Big Data
15:45 - 16:15
Coffee Break
16:15 - 17.15
Second Afternoon Session, Chair: Nuria De-Lama Sanchez (ATOS)
16.15 - 17.15
Open Data Session
Sören Roug Title of Talk: Linked Data Case Study Reportnet
Sander van der Waal and Christian Villum Title of Talk: A one-stop shop for Open Government Data: publicdata.eu improved with social features and more linked data sets
Bernadette Hyland on behalf of the W3C Government Linked Data Working Group Title of Talk: Delivering on Standards for Government Linked Data - A W3C Working Group Report
Michael Lutz Joint Research Centre, Scientific / Technical Project Officer Title of talk: Data interoperability across sectors and borders - INSPIRE and beyond
Case Studies and Experiences
Chair: Manolis Koubarakis (University of Athens)
Stefan Candea and Andreea Bonea Title of Talk: Sponge, a collaborative media innovation lab for Eastern Europe
Nikolaos Loutas & João R. Frade Title of Talk: Business models for Linked Government Data
Keiran Millard Manager at SeaZone Title of Talk: Frankenstein's Data
Kristin Lyng The Norwegian Meteorological Institute Title of Talk: Openness as a public strategy: Make open, make available
17.15 - 17.30
Closing of EDF2013
General Chairs and OC / EDF Team
Elena Simperl & Michael Hausenblas and
Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit "Data Value Chain" at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Panels & Sessions
Executive Panel on Big Data (Day I, 10:00 – 11:00)
The EDF2013 Executive Panel on Big Data brings together 6 executives of data and knowledge intense organisations from various sectors in Europe’s economy.
Big Data is the name of a technological field that is pushing back the frontiers of database technology far beyond current data management systems. Challenges are, for example, the sheer volume of data to be handled (soon the amount of data we acquire will bypass the amount of data we can store), streaming of data, heterogeneity of data, and openness versus privacy of data.
Exploiting big data properly is becoming increasingly essential for the strength and competitiveness of businesses and organizations, and significantly influences the quality of service provided by public and private institutions. In the panel we will explore, with six outstanding speakers, the key issues faced in the process of turning large data into high value.
Language Technology Panel: Unlocking the Data Treasure Chest
(Day II, 11:30 – 12:00)
Language technologies are inevitable for adding value to Big Data. They are needed for extracting information and knowledge from textual documents and social media, and for making them accessible across language borders. But they are also required for searching, linking and documenting non linguistic, e.g. numerical or multi media data, through effective metadata. And they are the core of intuitive semantic interfaces to the human consumer of the end products, e.g., through question answering, report generation and summarization. The proposed joint panel by META-NET, LT Innovate and Multilingual Web is a call for action: to further explore the impact of language technologies on big data and to develop a plan - for leveraging big data to big knowledge.
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Exhibition Space – Day II The exhibition will take place in the Hogan Foyer for the whole of Day II. There will be a Demo & Product Session in from 12:00 – 14:00 (coinciding with the lunch break).
Exhibitors
Title Organisation
Big Data for Reality Mining Centre for Research & Technology Hellas
CMS-L10N –Storing Translation Workflow Provenance in Linked Data.
Trinity College Dublin
Demonstrating Big Data Analytics for European SMEs TU Berlin
Developing a database and open API for providing access to open and linked data for careers guidance and counselling in the UK
Pontydysgu
Discover music that matters to you. Seevl
Enabling Networked Knowledge DERI, NUI Galway
Everything Is Connected: Using Linked Open Data for Multimedia Narration of Connections between Concepts
Ghent University - iMinds
Fighting Open Data Diversity with the Datalift Platform datalift
Geoknow Geoknow
Irish Marine Data Online Marine Institute
Linked Data Platform for Smart Cities - A Spanish Use Case iSOCO
Linked2Media: Leveraging Social Media Data for Corporate Brand and Market Sector Reputation Analysis
DERI, NUI Galway
Logix Agile: In-Memory Data Analytics Nathean Technologies Ltd.
MonetDB CWI
NASA WORLD WIND FOR SPATIAL DATA BASED SOLUTIONS Hungarian Association for Geo-information
pikwo: multimedia semantics. Vicomtech-IK4
PoolParty Semantic Web Company
RTE Archives RTE Archives
Scalable End-user access to Big Data Optique
ScraperWiki.com Scraperwiki
Seeing the wood for the trees ABComputing
Smartbay Ireland Smartbay Ireland
Socialens, Open Data Publishing Pipeline, Cloudspaces, Super Stream Collider
DERI, NUI Galway
Storyscope: Software for Shaping Narratives Decipher's Storyscope
The Abbey Theatre Digitisation Project The Abbey Theatre Digitisation Project
The CODE Research Project - Commercially Empowered Linked Open Data Ecosystems in Research
Know-Center GmbH
The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing: An Island of Big Data Looking for Solutions
Trinity College Dublin
The Pilot Linked Open Data the Netherlands Data Archiving and Networked Services
Visualisation for Energy Management of Smart Buildings
Trinity College Dublin
Who knows what? Visualizing sources of expertise through analysis of existing behavioural data
HeyStaks
Wildfire Monitoring using Earth Observation Data and Linked Geospatial Data
TELEIOS
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Tell me more about...
..the EDF 2013 Local Host, DERI, NUI Galway
The mission of DERI is to exploit semantics for people, organisations and systems to collaborate and interoperate on a global scale. After more than ten years of operation DERI has become one of the world’s leading international web and data science research institutes, interlinking technologies, information and people to advance business and benefit society. Research carried out at DERI has directly benefited and been used in industry and the public sector, as well as contributing to ground-breaking discoveries through the enablement of networked knowledge.
DERI was established in 2003 as a Centre for Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET) with funding
from Science Foundation Ireland. As a CSET, DERI brings together academic and industrial partners to boost innovation in science and technology. Since 2003 DERI has since grown to over 120 people and has acquired significant additional research funding from sources such as the European Union Framework Programmes, Enterprise Ireland and industrial partnerships. It has strong ties to local and national industry with involvement by multinational companies and Small and Medium Enterprises (SME’s) alike in its CSET programme.
..the venue, Croke Park
In the 1870’s, Dublin businessman Maurice Butterly owned the site upon which Croke Park now stands. It was known as the City and Suburban Racecourse, and its most frequent tenant was the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA). A former president and secretary of that organisation, Frank Dineen of Limerick, bought the site in 1908. In 1913 the GAA itself made the purchase and renamed the ground Croke Park in honour of the association’s first patron, Archbishop Croke of Cashel.
As time went on, the site was developed and redeveloped in an ad hoc manner as finances allowed. The Railway End, now the Dineen Hill 16, rose out of
the 1916 rising of O’Connell Street. The year 1924 saw the addition of the Hogan Stand, named after Tipperary footballer Michael Hogan, while the Cusack Stand, named after one of the original founder of the GAA, followed in 1937. The Canal End Terrace, named after the Royal Canal that runs behind it, was developed as a full terrace facility in 1949, greatly improving the comfort and view for spectators and the southern end of
the ground. And in 1952, the Nally Stand completed the project. Throughout its history, Croke Park has been a shining example of Irish
sport, hosting the Gaelic games as well as an array of world-class events. In 1972, the great Muhammad Ali came amidst a fanfare of publicity to defeat Al “Blue” Lewis. The year 2003 saw the stadium host the opening and closing ceremonies of the Special Olympics World Summer Games. And in 2007, the stadium opened its doors to rugby and soccer while the Lansdowne Road site is being redeveloped. And from Tina Turner and Garth Brooks to Bon Jovi; U2; Westlife and Take That, the world’s greatest performers have consistently graced our stage. Today, the stadium is refurbished and fully modernised, a shining icon of the Emerald Isle. With a capacity of 82,300, a historic pitch on which Irish sporting history has been made, and the facilities of the most sophisticated 21st century events centre, there is no finer venue in the country for meetings, events and celebrations.
..the host city, Dublin
Dublin is one of the top city break destinations in Europe and for atmosphere, night life, visitor attractions, activities and shopping, Dublin has very few rivals. Steeped in history and buzzing with youthful energy, the Irish capital is at the very heart of Irish culture.
Dublin is one of Europe’s oldest cities and as well as retaining its historical and cultural charms, Dublin offers trendy bars, elegant restaurants and stylish, cosmopolitan shops and hotels. There’s never been a better time to visit Dublin, a city that is rivalling Europe’s elite for hip appeal.
So, why not eat in a Castle, enjoy a night at the dogs, sit back and enjoy a pint of world famous Guinness or play a round of golf? With over fifty golf courses within an hour of Dublin, three racecourses and excellent fishing facilities, the sports enthusiast is well taken care of. Or enjoy a literary pub crawl around the city, experience a Dublin Bay sea thrill, a boat trip on the River Liffey or enjoy a traditional Irish music session in one of Dublin’s famous Irish pubs. The options are endless and the welcome is always warm. You can plan your visit at www.visitdublin.com or call into one of the tourist information offices.
9-10 April 2013. Dublin, Ireland
Sponsors of EDF 2013
Platinum Sponsors
Gold Sponsors
Silver Sponsors
Organising Partners
European Data Forum (EDF) 2013 Elena Simperl (University of Southampton, UK), Michael Hausenblas(MapR Technologies/DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland) , Deirdre Lee (DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland), Kjetil Kjernsmo (University of Oslo, Norway), Martin Kaltenböck
(Semantic Web Company, Austria)
Contents 1 Overview of EDF2013 ...................................................................................................................................... 2
EDF in a nutshell ............................................................................................................................................... 2
Mission and objectives.................................................................................................................................... 3
Registration/Attendee analysis .................................................................................................................. 4
Attendees by country .................................................................................................................................. 4
Attendees by organization ........................................................................................................................ 5
Attendees by position in their organizatins ....................................................................................... 6
Sponsors and supporters ............................................................................................................................... 7
2 Main program, including speakers, Innovation Award, accepted submissions, call for contributions, submission numbers and acceptance rates (Elena) .................................................. 9
The main conference ....................................................................................................................................... 9
Opening session ............................................................................................................................................ 9
Keynotes ....................................................................................................................................................... 10
Executive panel on Big Data .................................................................................................................. 11
Language technology panel: Unlocking the data treasure chest ............................................. 12
Invited and selected talks ....................................................................................................................... 13
Exhibition .............................................................................................................................................................. 13
Other tracks .......................................................................................................................................................... 13
Dissemination ...................................................................................................................................................... 14
Interviews and video summary ............................................................................................................... 14
Slideshare and videolectures.net ........................................................................................................ 14
Storify ............................................................................................................................................................. 15
National press and TV coverage .......................................................................................................... 16
Dissemination channels and their impact ....................................................................................... 17
How did you hear about EDF? .............................................................................................................. 17
1 Overview of EDF2013
EDF in a nutshell The European Data Forum (EDF) 2013 took place from April 9-10, 2013 in Dublin, Ireland in the Croke Park Conference Centre. EDF is the annual meeting-point for data practitioners from industry, research, the public-sector and the community, to discuss the opportunities and challenges of the emerging Big Data Economy in Europe.
The EDF 2013 comprised of keynotes from global experts in the field, a series of submitted talks, as well as a trends, showcase and live networking sessions. Topics included Linked Data, Open Data, and Big Data, with the aim to bring together all stakeholders involved in the data value chain to exchange ideas and develop actionable roadmaps addressing these challenges and opportunities to strengthen the European data economy and its positioning worldwide.
The European Data Forum 2013 was a joint activity of the EC projects:
• BIG (http://big-project.eu/) • LOD2 (http://lod2.eu/) • PlanetData (http://planet-data.eu/) • Optique (http://www.optique-project.eu/) • envision (http://www.envision-project.eu/) • TELEIOS (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/) • EUCLID (http://euclid-project.eu/)
The EDF2013 was supported by the European Commission as well as by the Digital Repository of Ireland (http://www.dri.ie/), STI International (http://www.sti2.org/), DERI, NUI Galway (http://www.deri.ie/), and Science Foundation Ireland (http://www.sfi.ie/). EDF2013 was an associated event of the Irish Presidency of the Council of the EU (http://www.eu2013.ie/).
Mission and objectives The aim of EDF2013 was to bring together all stakeholders involved in the data value chain to exchange ideas and develop actionable roadmaps addressing these challenges and opportunities to strengthen the European data economy and its positioning worldwide. The roadmaps are meant to be offered as a contribution to the definition of research, development, and policy activities at the level of the European Union institutions and those of its member states.
Following a successful launch in 2012, the 2013 edition of the European Data Forum specifically targeted the following topics:
• Is the European economy ready for Big Data? From novel innovation and business models for open and Linked Data, to platforms and marketplaces, policies. What are specifically European challenges and opportunities in this space?
• Are we reaching out to relevant stakeholders? Application scenarios and specific technical and non-technical requirements of Big Data providers and consumers in sectors such as Smart Cities, Environmental Research, Geo-Spatial Information, eScience, social media, etc.
• What does Europe provide in terms of innovative Business Intelligence solutions? SMEs and other technology providers offering tools to make use of Big Data, taking into account issues such as heterogeneity, quality, reliability, etc. and what is or should be its competitive advantage in this domain
This choice of topics was defines by the organization committee of the conference and drove our efforts to put together a diverse program consisting of keynotes, selected talks, as well as hands-on and networking sessions, as explained in more detail in Section 2.
Registration/Attendee analysis The total number of registrations for EDF 2013 was 421. Out of this number 276 people attended the conference. The conference offered a number of travel grants for European SMEs and other organizations from a total of 14 applications for such funding. The guidelines and eligibility criteria can be found at http://2013.data-forum.eu/conference-venue/edf2013-travel-grant. The following sections provide an analysis of the participation by country, type of organization, and role they play in the organization.
Attendees by country People from 39 different countries registered. Attendees were from 24 different countries.
Registered Attended 1. Ireland 172 104 2. Germany 38 33
3. United Kingdom 44 28 4. Norway 16 15 5. Belgium 18 13 6. Netherlands 12 11 7. Spain 16 11 8. France 9 8 9. Austria 10 7 10. Luxembourg 9 7 11. Greece 9 6 12. Italy 10 6 13. Slovenia 5 5 14. Slovakia 4 4 15. Czech Republic 6 3 16. Denmark 4 3 17. Lithuania 4 3 18. Romania 3 2 19. United States 6 2 20. Finland 1 1 21. Hungary 2 1 22. Poland 3 1 23. Sweden 1 1 24. Switzerland 1 1 25. India 2 0 26. Nepal 2 0 27. Sri Lanka 2 0 28. Albania 1 0 29. Bulgaria 1 0 30. Cyprus 1 0 31. Egypt 1 0 32. Iceland 1 0 33. Jordan 1 0 34. Pakistan 1 0 35. Palestinian Territory 1 0 36. Russia 1 0 37. Senegal 1 0 38. Sierra Leone 1 0 39. Turkey 1 0
Total 421 276
Attendees by organization People from 330 different organizations registered and attendants were from 214 different organizations.
Registered Attended 1. DERI, NUI Galway 20 17 2. European Commission 10 9 3. Trinity College Dublin 8 6 4. Digital Repository of Ireland 5 5 5. RTE 8 5 6. Royal Irish Academy 5 3 7. PwC 3 3 8. University of Leipzig 4 3 9. CNGL 3 3 10. Daimler AG 3 2 11. University College Dublin 5 1 12. Telecom Italia 3 1 13. TenForce 3 1 14. Organisations with 2 registrants 29 21 15. Organisations with 1 registrant 281 134
Attendees by position in their organizatins 98 people indicated having a position in university,1 59 of these attended. 95 people indicated holding an executive position,2 59 of these attended. Below is a tag cloud of the words people used to describe their positions.
1 Those are people who filled one of the following in the position field: student, professor, researcher, lecturer. 2 Those are people who have the word CEO, CTO, president, head of, chairman, chairperson or director in the position field.
Sponsors and supporters The European Data Forum is the annual meeting-point for data practitioners from industry, research, the public-sector and the community, to discuss the opportunities and challenges of the emerging Big Data Economy in Europe. We offered a selection of sponsorship packages targeting all these stakeholders (see Figure 1), which attracted a mixture of technology providers, end-user organizations, and research projects. We are grateful for the support and participation of two platinum sponsors, three gold sponsors, and three silver sponsors as follows:
• Platinum sponsors o Eccenca (http://www.eccenca.com/) o LDBC (http://ldbc.eu/)
• Gold sponsors o MonetDB (http://www.monetdb.org/) o ScraperWiki.com (http://scraperwiki.com/) o Siemens (http://www.siemens.com/)
• Silver sponsors o GeoKnow (http://www.geoknow.eu/) o SpagoBI by Engineering Group (http://www.spagoBI.org/)#
Figure 1: Sponsorship packages of EDF2013
Acquiring a critical mass of sponsorship proved to be one of the most challenging aspects of conference organization in 2013. While interest from the industry increased compared to the first edition of the conference, there is significant room for improvement in particular with respect to the representation of major industrial players in the data value chain. A viable option seemed to associate sponsorship with keynote and invited talks; independently of this option, it is recommended that sponsorship efforts are initiated as early as possible, as this also has a positive effect on the planning of the technical program of the conference, thus making the overall event more attractive for further participants and potential sponsors. Securing the support of several important Big Data players early in the process is expected to be essential for the further growth of the EDF.
2 Main program, including speakers, Innovation Award, accepted submissions, call for contributions, submission numbers and acceptance rates (Elena)
The main conference The program of EDF2013 consisted of a mixture of keynotes, invited talks and accepted talks which have been submitted by various stakeholders in the European data value chain in response to a call for presentations issued by the EDF2013 organization committee. The choice of talks was motivated by several criteria. First and foremost, the organization committee had a vested interest to put together a program that is representative and relevant for a wide range of organizations involved in the European data ecosystem. This influenced the selection of topics (technology, case studies, policy-oriented, research) and speakers (private organizations of different sizes, operating in various industrial sectors, public administration, including data providers and policy makers, and research centers). Second, and fully aligned with the mission of the EDF, the organization committee understood the Dublin event as a critical instrument to support and strengthen a thriving data economy in Europe. As such we were interested in promoting institutions based or having a strong European presence. In the following we will elaborate on the three components of the main program.
Opening session The opening session consisted of a mixture of short speeches from different officials of the EU and the Irish hosts. After the welcome by the general chairs together with Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit "Data Value Chain" at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology, the session continued with a video message by Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission, in charge of the Digital Agenda, followed by speeches by
• Roberto Viola, Deputy Director General at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology;
• Prof. Mark Ferguson, Director General Science Foundation Ireland and Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government of Ireland; and
• Minister Alan Shatter, Minister for Justice, Equality and Defence of Ireland.
The video message by Commissioner Neelie Kroes is available on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=jIEqdz31-9M
Keynotes In addition to the prestigious speakers in the welcome session, the European Data Forum welcomed several technical and business-oriented keynotes:
• Gerhard Kreß, Director Strategic IT at Siemens AG, speaking about the use of Big Data technologies in industrial applications at Siemens.
• Ingo Brenckmann, Senior Development Manager and leader of the SAP HANA product management team, speaking about in-memory computing as a means to master performance in a Big Data landscape.
• Knut Sebastian Tungland, Statoil ASA, Chief Engineer IT, speaking about the Big Data challenges and the need of large corporations in the oil and gas industries to understand the data they own and produce.
• Michael Gorriz, Daimler AG, CIO and Head of Information Technology Management introduced a project at Daimler which applied Linked Data and semantic technologies in order to enable data integration and intelligent search. This presentation was part of the European Data Innovation Award. This award was introduced in 2013, with the support of Eccenca, one of our platinum sponsors. The winner was introduced by Roberto Viola, Deputy Director General at European Commission, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology, and Hans-Christian Brockmann, CEO Eccenca, as award sponsor.
• V. Richard Benjamins, Telefonica Digital, Director Business Intelligence, addressing
the risks and opportunities associated with the rise of Big Data, and their impact on European economy.
• Stefan Decker, Professor for Digital Enterprise & Director of DERI, National University of Ireland, Galway giving an overview of the Big Data landscape in Ireland.
Executive panel on Big Data The EDF2013 hosted an Executive Panel on Big Data, which brought together six executives of data and knowledge-intensive organizations from various sections of the European economy:
• Richard Benjamins, Telefonica Digital • Michael Gorriz, Daimler • François Bourdoncle, Exalead • Gerhard Kress, Siemens • Gary Evans, EMC • Roberto Viola, DG Connect of EC
The panel was moderated by Prof. Dieter Fensel, STI Innsbruck, University of Innsbruck, Austria, as representative of the BIG European project. More information about the panel can be found at http://2013.data-forum.eu/edf2013-executive-panel-big-data.
Language technology panel: Unlocking the data treasure chest A second panel was organized on the second day of the conference. While the Big Data executive panel covered issues related to the management of large amounts of heterogeneous and rapidly changing data sets, this panel focused on data that has a language dimension attached to it. There were three panelists from industry and academia:
• Hans-Ulrich von Freyberg, CEO Cocomore AG • Philippe Wacker, Secretary General LT-Innovate • Hans Uszkoreit, Scientific Director DFKI GmbH
The panel was moderated by Gudrun Magnusdottir, CSO and Chairperson ESTeam. More information is available at http://2013.data-forum.eu/panel-language-technology.
As a general comment to the topic coverage of EDF2013, the organization committee recommends a more timely and substantial involvement of language technologies stakeholders. Having a stronger representation of this this core component of the data value chain is an opportunity to reach out to new communities and increase the visibility of the event.
Invited and selected talks The remaining program of the main conference was structured as a mixture of talks oriented towards research challenges, technology, standards and policies, as well as use case requirements and case study presentations. From a total of 29 talks, 21 talks have been selected in response to an open call for contributions and the remaining 8 were invited talks suggested by the organization committee. This methodology ensured a balance between topics covering the mission of EDF, different types of stakeholders, and interest of the broader community. The call for contributions attracted a great deal of attention; we received 61 submissions, of which 21 were selected by the organization committee for presentation in Dublin. The talks were organized in sessions as follows:
• Challenges of the data economy • Best practices • Challenges of the Irish data economy • The power of open data • Research and technology • Impact of big and open data • Open data • Case studies and experiences
Exhibition We received 30 submissions and all were accepted as they matched the capacity of the venue exactly. Of the 30 submissions, 7 were commercial sponsors, 12 were Irish submissions, and 11 were academic or EC projects. The exhibits were generally staffed by the exhibitors the entire second day of the conference, but the period between 12 and 14 had no competing programme and in that period, the exhibition was very well attended by participants.
Other tracks In addition to the main track, the conference offered a side track. The side track sessions were well attended and some report of long and lively discussions into the coffee breaks. The format of side track sessions included tutorials, applications/technology sessions, and regular talks for a more narrow audience than the main track talks. The title of the side track sessions were:
• Introduction to Big Data, a tutorial held by Marko Grobelnik, JSI, Slovenia. The slides as well as more information about this tutorial are available at http://2013.data-forum.eu/tutorial-introduction-big-data.
• Earth Sciences, a session chaired by Manolis Koubarakis, University of Athens, Greece and organized by the TELEIOS project (http://www.earthobservatory.eu/)
• Towards a data science curriculum for professionals, chaired by John Domingue, The Open University, UK, on behalf of EUCLID (http://www.euclid-project.org/).
• Introduction to the Big Data Public Private Forum, chaired by Tilman Becker, DFKI, Germany, on behalf of the BIG project (http://big-project.eu/).
Dissemination
Interviews and video summary Highlights of the event were captured in a series of short video interviews available on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLcyvKLe4w9ExYVWS5RIvGZReIc1_nz2fS. In addition, the conference team also produced a video teaser of the overall event including interview snippets and impressions. It is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iYswsLDBSA&list=PLcyvKLe4w9ExYVWS5RIvGZReIc1_nz2fS&index=1.
Slideshare and videolectures.net A large majority of the presentations are available as slide decks on SlideShare at http://www.slideshare.net/EUDataForum/presentations. Recordings of the talks were kindly made available by videolectures.net and can be seen at
http://videolectures.net/dataforum2013_dublin/ in collaboration with the FP7 Network of Excellence PlanetData.
Storify DERI and the Digital Repository of Ireland created a social-media-centric summary of the 2013’s edition of the European Data Forum. The results are available at http://www.dri.ie/edf2013-conversation .
National press and TV coverage
• Big Data to open up wealth of treasures in the RTE Archives o RTE News o April 10th 2013 o http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWnPihz_gMk
• DERI key as ‘Big Data’ to open wealth of treasures in the RTÉ archives o Galway Advertiser o April 11th 2013 o http://www.advertiser.ie/galway/article/60115/deri-key-asbig-data-to-
open-wealth-of-treasures-in-the-rt-archives • Shatter calls for balance in data protection laws
o RTE o April 9th 2013 o http://www.rte.ie/news/2013/0409/380523-data-protection-
legislation/ • RTÉ to employ semantic web and big data to preserve Ireland’s memories
o Silicon Republic o April 9th 2013
o http://www.siliconrepublic.com/cloud/item/32211-rt-to-employ-semantic-web/
• Shatter calls for practical data protection rules o The Irish Times o April 9th 2013
o http://www.irishtimes.com/business/sectors/media-and-marketing/shatter-calls-for-practical-data-protection-rules-1.1354190
Dissemination channels and their impact The organization committee of the EDF2013 used a wide range of dissemination and promotion channels, including press releases, a Web site, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Table 1 summarizes the results of these efforts in numbers, while the rest of the section provides more details about the individual channels and their impact.
Table 1: Summary of dissemination metrics
Channel Metric Press releases 4 News items published on the Web site 11 Page impressions/month 17.500 Page visits/month 6500 Users/month 3600 Visits during the conference (including streaming)
1500
Number of tweets posted by EDF 195 Number of followers of the EDF account 384 Number of members in LinkedIn group 254
How did you hear about EDF?
Registered Attended 1. From a colleague 171 121 2. On a mailing-list 67 33
3. Other 35 26 4. On another Web site 28 10 5. At another event 17 8 6. On LinkedIn 12 6 7. On Twitter 16 4 8. From a friend 6 4 9. On Facebook 1 1 10. (blank) 47 42
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
EDF2013 Website Visits over Time
EDF2013 WebsiteVisitsover Time
0500
1000150020002500300035004000
EDF2013 Website Visitors over Time
EDF2013 WebsiteVisitors over Time
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
EDF2013 Website Page Impressions over Time
EDF2013 Website PageImpressions over Time
0
50
100
150
200
250
EDF Tweets over Time
EDF Tweets over Time
050
100150200250300350400450
EDF Twitter Followers over Time
EDF Twitter Followersover Time
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
EDF LinkedIn Membersover Time
EDF LinkedInDiscussions over Time
Date Number of news on data-forum.eu
Number of press releases
Visits (last month)
Visitors (last month)
Page impressions (last month)
Tweets EUDataForum
Twitter followers
LinkedIn Nr GroupMembers
LinkedIn Nr discussions
facebook likes
Google+ Nr of Likes
04/01/2013 2 0 247 168 525 60 151 189 7 64 78 22/01/2013 4 1 889 638 2288 65 181 195 24 78 80 28/01/2013 4 1 1352 908 3470 68 191 206 26 87 81 06/02/2013 4 1 1862 1140 4558 75 194 210 29 93 81 15/02/2013 5 1 2105 1199 5252 76 198 220 32 n/a n/a 25/02/2013 6 2 2300 1218 5864 80 209 224 36 97 83 04/03/2013 6 2 2510 1349 6452 83 216 224 36 101 83 15/03/2013 6 2 3412 1884 9105 89 240 227 40 110 85 21/03/2013 7 2 3974 2237 10608 94 246 230 41 110 85 02/04/2013 8 2 3947 2358 10549 99 258 235 44 118 89 08/04/2013 9 3 4485 2653 12251 107 301 245 52 120 91 10/04/2013 11 3 5904 3392 15896 195 380 253 55 127 93 11/04/2013 11 3 6520 3665 17330 195 384 254 56 127 93
Further impressions of the EDF2013 are available in our photo streams on Flickr:
• Official EDF2013 Photo Stream • flickR stream day 1 • flickR stream day 2 • DERI flickR Stream of EDF2013
Presseinformation: I-Semantics 20125.-7. September Messekongress GrazÖsterreichs größte Konferenz zum Thema Semantic Web
Semantic Web - ein technologischer Hebel
für Big und Open Data
(Wien, Graz - August 2012) Zum 8. Mal treffen sich Forscher, Entwickler und Anwender in Graz.
Diskutiert und präsentiert werden dabei die neuesten Trends und innovativen Technologien
des Semantic Web, die bei Facebook, Google und Co. ebenso strategisch eingesetzt werden,
wie sie auch bei Big Data und Open Data längst schon als Schlüsseltechnologien gehandelt
werden.
Bestimmende IT-Trends und die strategischen Entscheidungen der "big player" bei globalen IT-
Unternehmen rücken das Semantic Web immer mehr ins Zentrum kommender technologischer
Szenarien: Big Data etwa beschäftigt die Fachwelt schon länger, erhielt aber erst in den letzten
Monaten eine größere Aufmerksamkeit durch die wachsende Resonanz in Foren, Blogs oder Trend-
Reports wie "Linked Data: connecting and exploiting big data" von Fujitsu. Wenn Branchengrößen wie
Google, Facebook, FindTheBest oder Hunch "Decision Graphs", "Taste Graphs", "Social Graphs" oder
"Knowledge Graphs" erstellen, greifen auch sie auf Konzepte des Semantic Web zurück. Ob dieser in
Bewegung kommende Markt für alle Teilnehmer ein lukrativer sein wird, scheint jedoch noch nicht
ausdiskutiert, da talis systems - als einer der Pioniere bei Semantic Web - gerade seine
diesbezüglichen Aktivitäten mit der Linked Data Hosting Plattform kasabi einstellt. Die Diskussion um
Big, Open und Linked Data zieht weite Kreise - wohin die Reise führt, wird sich zeigen: die I-
Semantics 2012 bietet dazu jedenfalls spannende Beiträge.
Die Keynotes der I-Semantics zeigen auf welche Bereiche unseres Lebens in naher Zukunft
zunehmend von semantischen Technologien profitieren und revolutioniert werden:
• Lora Aroyo beschäftigt sich in dem Projekt NoTube mit der Integration von Web- und TV-
Daten und wird Ausblicke auf Szenarien der Zukunft geben.
• Wie sich die Forschung verändert und welchen Nutzen der Wissenschaftsbetrieb aus
semantischen Technologien zieht, zeigtEric Duval in seinem Vortrag auf.
• Chris Welty bringt uns auf den aktuellen Stand der der Ontologie-Forschung am IBM Thomas
J. Watson Research Center.
• David Mallon wird uns erzählen, wie eine "high-impact learning culture" der Schlüssel zur
Marktführerschaft für Unternehmen sein kann.
• Quality by Design und welche Bedeutung es für Roche Diagnostics hat erfahren wir von
Andreas Schneider.
"Das Konzept der I-SEMANTICS besteht darin die innovativsten Köpfe und Institutionen rund um das
Thema semantische Systeme zusammenzubringen und die Konferenz inhaltlich auszurichten"
betont Konferenz Chair Tassilo Pellegrini von der Fachhochschule St. Pölten. So sind dieses Jahr
neben der Semantic Web Company und der FH St. Pölten das Hasso Plattner Institut der Universität
Potsdam, die technische Universität Lissabon, das Institute for Cognitive Science and Technology in
Rom, die Universität Stuttgart, die Universität Düsseldorf und die Universität Leipzig an der
Organisation beteiligt.
Unterschiedliche Veranstaltungsreihen unterstreichen die Verknüpfung von wissenschaftlicher
Forschung und der Realisierung von Lösungen für die Wirtschaft: Der Scientific Track veranstaltet den
Linked Data Cup und vergibt Auszeichnungen für herausragende Konferenzbeiträge. Brandaktuelle
Topics und Applikationen werden im Posters/Demos/PhD-Track vorgestellt. Im iPraxis Track werden
Technologie-Lösungen aus der Praxis demonstriert und Anwender, Entwickler oder
Entscheidungsträger können sich im Matchmaking-Event miteinander vernetzen. Gleichzeitg mit der I-
Semantics findet auch die 12. Ausgabe der Wissensmanagement-Konferenz I-Know statt um
Synergien der zwei Bereiche zu nutzen und stärker miteinander zu verbinden.
Weiterführende Information zum Konferenzprogramm und wie sie sich registrieren können finden sie
auf www.i-semantics.at.
Rückfragenhinweis
Thomas Thurner
Head of Division Transfer [email protected] - 0664/88679980
Ihre Ansprechpartner für inhaltliche Fragen
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini (Fachhochschule St. Pölten)
[email protected] – 0650/7621670
Der Besuch von I-SEMANTICS und I-KNOW ist für Medienvertreter kostenfrei. Zur Akkreditierung wenden
Sie sich bitte an [email protected]
Über die Semantic Web Company (SWC)
Wissensarbeiter haben heutzutage mit enormen Informationsmengen zu tun. Ihre tägliche Aufgabe besteht darin, Dokumente und Datensätze zu analysieren, essentielle Teile daraus zu extrahieren, diese aufzubereiten und mit anderen Informations-Fragmenten zu verknüpfen.Die Experten der Semantic Web Company arbeiten seit über 10 Jahren an branchenübergreifenden Methoden und Software-Werkzeugen, die dabei helfen, die Ressource „Information“ effizienter nutzen zu können.
Wobei kann die SWC unterstützen?
Enterprise Suche & Datenintegration Social Software & Recommender Systeme Metadaten Management & Enterprise Vocabulary Management Wissensnetze, Intranet & Wissensmanagement-Systeme Kollaborative Arbeitsweisen & Enterprise Wikis Text Mining und Wissensextraktion Linked Open Data-Strategien
SWC - Produkte
PoolParty – Semantic Information ManagementDie PoolParty Produktfamilie unterstützt das Informationsmanagement: Metadaten Management basierend auf offenen Semantic Web Standards, semantische Enterprise Suche & hoch performantes Text Mining sowie Datenintegration basierend auf Linked Data Technologien. Confluence – Enterprise WikiAtlassian Confluence ist ein einfach zu bedienendes und außerordentlich leistungsstarkes Enterprise Wiki, das es erlaubt, in Teams die relevanten Inhalte rasch und einfach zu erstellen, diese mit ausgesuchten Personen zu teilen und zu bearbeiten, sowie Dokumente zu verwalten und diese auch kollaborativ zu bearbeiten.
SWC - Forschungsaktivitäten
Thesaurus basiertes Text Mining: Performance-Optimierungen Geschäftsmodelle auf Basis von Linked Open Data und offenen Web-Standards Enterprise Datenintegration auf Basis von Linked Data Alignment Recommender- und Ratgeber-Systeme auf Basis semantischer Technologien
SWC - Referenzen (Auszug)UNIQA Versicherungen, Roche, Credit Suisse, British Museum, Raiffeisen Bankengruppe, A1Telekom Austria, Biogen Idec, Geologische Bundesanstalt, Education Services Australia, NAVTEQ, REEEP, Austria Presse Agentur (APA), Bundesministerium für Landesverteidigung, Stadt Wien, Wolters Kluwer, Compass Verlag, Rotes Kreuz
SWC - Partner (Auszug)Universität Leipzig, Know Center Graz/TU Graz, DTI AG (Schweiz), DERI Galway, OpenLink Software, Gnowsis
SWC im Web: http://www.semantic-web.at SWC-Anschrift: Mariahilfer Straße 70 /Neubaugasse 1 / Top 8, A-1070 Wien. SWC-Tel. +43-1-402 12 35 SWC-Mail: [email protected]
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13th International Conference on Knowledge Management and Knowledge Technologies
9th International Conference on Semantic Systems
Program 2013
4 – 6 September 2013 – Messe Congress Graz – Austria
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Room 1
Halle 12
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Gallerysecond floor
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www.know-center.at www.i-know.at www.i-semantics.at
Conference Venue
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General Information
Welcome Reception
4 September, 19.30 – 22.30 Alte Universität, Hofgasse 14, 8010 Graz
Guided tour from the conference venue to the Welcome Reception Meetingpoint: registration desk at 18.30
Refreshments Refreshments and snacks are available at the coffee break areas. A cold and warm buffet will be served during lunchtime.
Exhibition Area, Thematic tours
The i-Know exhibition area provides latest information on developments and products of KT industry and applied-research projects. The promo tables and exhibition stalls are convenient meeting points for exchange between industry and science. Every day during lunch-time, i-Know provides a guided tour to the most interesting demos for a dedicated application area. The tour’s topics and meeting points will be announced duri-ng the conference sessions.
Ground Transportation Train & Airport
Graz has a convenient public transportation system. The main junction is «Jakominiplatz» in downtown Graz. From there, every location can easily be reached by public transport. A one-hour ticket costs EUR 2,10. For further infor-mation about public transportation contact our registration desk.
Alternatively, taxis are available. A one-way fare from the conference location to the central station is about EUR 15,00, the fare to Graz Airport is about EUR 20,00. Taxis can be called by phone. Dial +43 316 878 for a local taxi cen-ter. For further information contact our registration desk.
Registration
The registration desk is located on the ground floor in the foyer of the conference venue. Service times are as follows:
Wednesday, 4 September
8.00 – 18.00
Thursday, 5 September
9.00 – 18.00
Friday, 6 September
9.00 – 15.00
The registration desk welcomes any questions. Do not hesitate to contact any Know-Center staff member for immediate help or assistance.
Social Event
5 September, Conference Venue Best Paper & Demo Award Ceremony 18.30 Gala Dinner 19.00
We are pleased to invite you to our Gala Dinner at the conference venue on Thursday. We are happy to offer you fine local specialities from a dinner buffet, alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages as well as live music.
Please do not forget your name badge!
I-KNOW Conference Assistant
The I-KNOW Conference Assi-stant provides fast access to the conference schedule, location of session rooms, accepted publica-tions, and latest news posted by participants.
Overview
General Information 2 – 3
Wednesday 4 – 9
Thursday 10 – 15
Friday 16 – 19
Conference Map 20
Know-Center funded by
CID provides innovative products and solutions which form the technological basis for both more efficient business pro-cesses and more intelligent information management with fo-cus on competitive intelligence and knowledge management.
The CID products Topic Analyst® and CORPUS® allow orga-nizations to handle information innovatively (semantic enter-prise search, monitoring and real-time dashboards) in order to generate knowledge in the best possible way and thus to increase competitiveness.
The optimal recognition of topics, trends and tonalities is highly relevant to most different business areas: strategic
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Room 3 Room 4 Room 5 Room 11B Room 12A Room 12B Room 10
w
Room1Room1
Knowledge & Data Analytics (1)
Extracting Knowledge from Wikipedia Articles through Distributed Semantic AnalysisNguyen Trung Hieu, Mario Di Francesco, Antti Ylä-Jääski
Do We Need Entity-Centric Knowledge Bases for Entity Disambiguation?Stefan Zwicklbauer, Christin Seifert, Michael Granitzer
Automatic Mapping of Wikipedia Templates for Fast Deployment of Localized DBpedia DatasetsAlessio Palmero Aprosio, Claudio Giuliano, Alberto Lavelli
Science 2.0 (1)
KeynoteKlaus Tochtermann
TiNYARM: Awareness of Research Papers in a Community of PracticeGonzalo Parra, Joris Klerkx, Erik Duval
Games with a Purpose or Mechanised Labour? A Comparative StudyMarta Sabou, Kalina Bontcheva, Arno Scharl, Michael Föls
Ontological Engineering (1)
Engineering Optimisations in Query Rewriting for OBDAJose Mora, Oscar Corcho
Towards Evaluation and Comparison of Tools for Ontology Population from Spreadsheet Data Kovalenko Olga, Estefania Serral, Stefan Biffl
Ontology-Based Situation Recognition for Context-Aware SystemsJudie Attard, Simon Scerri, Ismael Rivera, Siegfried Handschuh
EU-DAY (1) Synergy Workshop: User Modelling
The MIRROR User Profile: A Concept for App-Independent User Modelling and SupportAngela Fessl, Gudrun Wesiak, Marina Bratic, Granit Luzhnica
Modelling User Cultural Exposure Utilising Social and Linked DataRonald Denaux , Claudia Hauff, Dhavalkumar Thakker, Lucia Pannese, Declan Dagger, Vania Dimitrova, Geert-Jan Houben
Semantically-enriched Intelligent Support to Make Sense of User Generated ContentLydia Lau, Vania Dimitrova, Dhaval Thakker, Dimoklis Despotakis
Registration
Opening: Stefanie Lindstaedt (Know-Center, TU Graz), Michael Granitzer (University of Passau),
Tassilo Pellegrini (St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences), Harald Sack (Hasso-Plattner-Institut, University of Potsdam)
Keynote: Tiit Paananen «Skype: Continuous Learning of Skype Engineers»
Coffee Break
8.00 – 9.00
9.00 – 9.30
9.30 – 10.30
10.30–11.00
˙
Sessions start
at 11.00
30 min
30 min
30 min
12.30 – 14.00
Wednesday4 Sept. 2013, 8.00 – 14.00
Lunch Break
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
PWM Wissenstag Social Enterprise (1)
Social Knows Anneliese Breitner (Anne Breitner Consulting)
OneHP – Knowledge Management & Social Networking bei HP weltweitBirgit Gobi (HP)
Social Intranet der Raiffeisen Bank International (Head Office) Manfred Koch (Raiffeisen Bank International)
i-Praxis
KT Applications in Industry (1)
Performance Support @ Philips Lightning UniversityHans Ramaker (Philips)
Semantic Knowledge Integration and Visualization – Results from the DIVINE Project Arno Scharl (MODUL University Vienna)
Language Meets Knowledge – How to Achieve Cross-Border InteroperabilityMichael Wetzel (ESTeam AB)
Opening Michael Wiesmüller (bm:vit) Stefanie Lindstaedt (Know-Center)
Smart Grids: Eine Perspektive aus der ForschungLothar Fickert (TU Graz, Institut für elektrische Anlagen)
Smart Grids (1)
Zukünftige Anforderungen des Low Voltage – Grids an die IKTJohann Nyikos (Siemens)
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Knowledge & Data Analytics (2)
Knowledge Scaffolding: A Classification of Visual Structures for Knowledge Communication in TeamsElitsa Alexander, Martin J. Eppler, Sabrina Bresciani
OntoSketch: Towards Digital Sketching as a Tool for Creating and Extending Ontologies for Non-ExpertsMarius Brade, Florian Schneider, Angelika Salmen, Rainer Groh
Visual Analysis of Compliance with Clinical GuidelinesPeter Bodesinsky, Paolo Federico, Silvia Miksch
Science 2.0 (2)
A Data Restore Model for Reproducibility in Computational StatisticsDaniel Bahls, Benjamin Zapilko, Klaus Tochtermann
Assessing Barcamps: Incentives for Participation in Ad-Hoc Conferences and the Role of Social MediaSebastian Dennerlein, Robert Gutounig, Peter Kraker, Rene Kaiser, Romana Rauter, Julian Ausserhofer
Automatic Annotation of Scientific Video Material based on Visual Concept DetectionChristian Hentschel, Ina Blümel, Harald Sack
Ontological Engineering (2)
An Analysis Framework for Ontology Querying ToolsFajar J. Ekaputra, Estefanía Serral, Dietmar Winkler, Stefan Biffl
The Foundations of Virtual Ontology NetworksAlessandro Adamou, Paolo Ciancarini, Aldo Gangemi, Valentina Presutti
Towards a Unified Visual Notation for OWL Ontologies: Insights from a Comparative User Study
Stefan Negru, Florian Haag, Steffen Lohmann
Sessions start
at 14.00
30 min
30 min
30 min
15.30 – 16.30
Wednesday4 Sept. 2013, 14.00 – 16.30
Coffee Break
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
PWM Wissenstag Social Enterprise (2)
Öffentliche Q&A Plattformen – Chancen und Risiken beim Einsatz in OrganisationenMike Heininger (wissen.io)
Was man als Unternehmen über Facebook wissen muss!Gerald Berger (Conversory)
Wikis in Unternehmen – Nutzen und AnwendungenAndreas Koller (Semantic Web Company)
i-Praxis
KT Applications in Industry (2)
Keynote: Knowledge Management im Einsatz für Competitive Intelligence – Relevante Informationen intelligent finden und analysierenDr. Werner Schachner, Alexander Stumpfegger (CID)
An Innovative Product Data Management Approach Based on Semantic VectorsMoises Martinez-Abl Anedo (AIRBUS)
How Does Linked Data Change the Publishing Landscape?Quentin Reul (Wolters KLUWER)
EU-DAY (2) Synergy Workshop: User Support
Scaling Informal Learning: An Integrative Systems View on Scaffolding at the WorkplaceJohn Cook, Sebastian Dennerlein, Milos Kravcik, Christine Kunzmann, Mart Laanpere, Kai Pata, Jukka Purma, John Sandars, Patricia Santos, Andreas Schmidt
The MIRROR Reflection Guidance Concept for Automatic Support of Individual Reflective LearningAngela Fessl, Marina Bratic, Sandra Feyertag, Gudrun Wesiak
Supporting Self-Regulated Learning in Personal Learning EnvironmentsAlexander Nussbaumer, Milos Kravcik, Dietrich Albert
IKT-Innovationen für intelligente Energienetze und -systeme – internationale Best Practises und Potentiale in ÖsterreichChristian Derler (Joanneum Research), Robert Hinterberger (New Energy Capital Invest)
Networked Data im Smart Grid Context Jesper Grönbaek (FTW)
Smart Grids (2)
ICT Challenges in Smart Grids – Lessons Learned from Field TrialsFriederich Kupzog (AIT)
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Knowledge & Data Analytics (3)
A Visualization Approach for Cross-level Exploration of Spatiotemporal DataHans-Jörg Schulz, Steffen Hadlak, Heidrun Schumann
Panel (17.00 – 18.00)
Science 2.0 (3)
Panel (16.30 – 17.30)
Exploring Factual and Perceived Use and Benefits of a Web 2.0-Based Knowledge Management Application: The Siemens Case References+Alexander Stocker, Johannes Mueller
Ontological Engineering (3)
User-driven Quality Evaluation of DBpediaAmapali Zaveri, Dimitris Kontokostas, Mohamed Sherif, Lorenz Bühmann, Mohamed Morsey, Sören Auer, Jens Lehmann
A Practical Experience Concerning the Parallel Semantic Annotation of a Large-Scale Data CollectionJavier Fabra, Sergio Hernández, Estefanía Otero, Juan Carlos Vidal, Manuel Lama and Pedro Álvarez
Improving Efficiency and Accuracy in Multilingual Entity ExtractionJoachim Daiber, Max Jakob, Chris Hokamp, Pablo N. Mendes
PWM Wissenstag Social Enterprise (3)
i-Praxis
KT Applications in industry (3)
EU-DAY (3) Synergy Workshop: Evaluation
Evaluation in ImREAL: Lessons Learned from a Project on Augmenting Experiential Training SimulatorsChristina M. Steiner, Gudrun Wesiak, Dietrich Albert
Equalia – An Evaluation Service in the Application Context of Technology-Enhanced LearningAlexander Nussbaumer, Christina M. Steiner, Eva Hillemann, Dietrich Albert
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Reflective Learning at WorkMarina Bratic, Gudrun Wesiak, Angela Fessl
Sessions start
at 16.30
30 min
30 min
30 min
18.30
19.30
Wednesday4 Sept. 2013, 16.30 – 22.30
Guided Tour from the Conference Venue to the Welcome Reception, Meetingpoint: Registration Desk
Welcome Reception Alte Universität, Hofgasse 14, 8010 Graz
Smart Grids (3)
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
Data Analytics for Energy ApplicationsThomas Natschläger (SCC Hagenberg)
Panel (17.00 – 18.00)
Keynote: Supporting Professional Communities in the Next Web (16.30 – 17.30)
Ralf Klamma (RWTH Aachen University)
Closing Discussion Christoph Trattner (Know-Center)
(Linked Data in Product Development Kai Holzweißig (DAIMLER)
Collection of Lessons Learned with Web 2.0 TechnologiesSebastian Peneder (Kapsch BusinessCom)
SAP Goes SocialSilke Retzer (SAP)
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Room 3 Room 4 Room 5 Gallery
Room1
Social & Mobile Computing (1)
Shaping a Social Software for a Distributed Military OrganisationChristina Bülow, Johannes Metscher, Jan-Mathis Schnurr, Michael Koch
Organize, Socialize, Benefit – How Social Media Applications Impact Enterprise Success and PerformanceFranz Lehner, Nora Fteimi
Linked Data Cup
Generating a Linked Soccer Dataset (11.00 – 11.20)
Tanja Bergmann, Stefan Bunk, Johannes Eschrig, Christian Hentschel, Magnus Knuth, Harald Sack, Ricarda Schueler
Publishing and Linking University Data Considering the Dynamism of Datasources (11.20 – 11.40)
Tayfun Gokmen Halac, Bahtiyar Erden, Emrah Inan, Damla Oguz, Pinar Gocebe, Oguz Dikenelli
Insights in Global Public Spending (11.40 – 12.00)
Michalis Vafopoulos, Marios Meimaris, Jose María Álvarez Rodríguez, Ioannis Xidias, Michael Klonaras, George Vafeiadis
Linked Cancer Genome Atlas Database (12.00 – 12.20)
Muhammad Saleem, Shanmukha Sampath Padmanabhuni, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo, Jonas S. Almeida, Stefan Decker, Helena F. Deus
Linked Data Management (1)
BauDataWeb: The Austrian Building and Construction Materials Market as Linked DataAndreas Radinger, Bene Rodriguez-Castro, Alex Stolz, Martin Hepp
Discovery Hub: On-The-Fly Linked Data Exploratory SearchNicolas Marie, Myriam Ribiere, Fabien Gandon, Florentin Rodio.
Monitoring the Dynamism of the Linked Data Space through Environment AbstractionRiza Cenk Erdur, Oylum Alatli, Tayfun Gokmen Halac and Oguz Dikenelli
Registration
Keynote: Ed H. Chi (Google)«The Science of Social Interactions on the Web»
Coffee Break
9.00 – 9.30
9.30 – 10.30
10.30 – 11.00
Sessions start
at 11.00
30 min
30 min
30 min
12.30 – 14.00 Lunch Break
Dependencies between E-Learning Usage Patterns and Learning ResultsFelix Mödritscher, Monika Andergassen, Gustaf Neumann
Thursday5 Sept. 2013, 9.00 – 14.00
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
Smart Health (1)
AAL – Addressing the Demographic Aging Challenges and OpportunitiesGerda Geyer (FFG - the Austrian Research Promotion Agency)
PhD Cooperation Event
Meet with fellow PhD students to get feedback on your dissertation project, and talk about all things related to a PhD. There is no fixed agenda and we invite you to participate in shaping the topics for this session. Former, soon-to-be and interested non-PhD students are welcome to take part in the action as well.Sebastian Dennerlein, Rene Kaiser, Patrick Hoefler (Wissensmanagement Forum Graz)
EU-DAY Trends in HR
OpeningStefanie Lindstaedt
MIRROR: Reflective Learning at WorkEllen Leenarts , Angela Fessl
Smart Mobility (1)
Scheduling & Tracking Management – Impact von Smart Services im automobile B2B BereichJens Poggenburg (AVL)
Wissensbasierte Konstruktion in der Automobilentwicklung – Entwicklung – Stand der Umsetzung – künftige HerausforderungenAlfred Katzenbach
Mehrwert für Entwickler/-innen in der virtuellen Fahrzeug-entwicklung durch effizienten Zugriff auf Informationen und deren ZusammenhängeBernd Fachbach (Virtual Vehicle)
Smart Health – A Psycho-somatic Competence /Intelligence Perspective: Challenges in Health Pro-motion and in Clinical Fields Christian Fazekas, Franziska Matzer (Medical University of Graz)
ImREAL: Immersive Reflective Experience-Based Adaptive LearningLydia Lau, Christina M. Steiner, Gudrun Wesiak, Vania Dimitrova, Dietrich Albert
CULTURA: Cultivating Understanding and Research Through AdaptivityEva Hillemann, Christina M. Steiner, Alexander Nussbaumer, Dietrich Albert
Ambient Assisted Living in the Context of Living, Learning and Mobility
Maria Fellner (Joanneum Research)
Room 11A Room 12A Room 12B
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Room 1 Room 3 Room 5 Room 11A Room 12A Room 12B Room 10Room 1
Poster & Demo 1 Minute Madness
Each presenter gets 1 minute and 1 slide. That‘s madness? It is madness. 1 Minute Madness.
Social & Mobile Computing (2)
Facilitating Team Processes with Recommender Systems: A Behavioral Science PerspectiveIsabella Seeber
Comparison of the Results of an Authorship-Based Expert Recommender Against Data from a Directory of ExpertsWilko Kraß, Ulrich Försterling
Linked Data Management (2)
Turning the OpenMobileNetwork into a Live Crowdsourcing Platform for Semantic Context-Aware ServicesAbdulbaki Uzun, Lorenz Lehmann, Thilo Geismar, Axel Küpper
Rethinking Service Oriented Architectures in the Semantic Web Stefano Bocconi, Stefano Travelli
Sessions start
at 14.00
30 min
30 min
15.00 – 15.30 Coffee Break
Thursday5 Sept. 2013, 14.00 – 16.00
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
Smart Mobility (2)
Potenzial von Mobilfunkbewegungsdaten im VerkehrswesenMichael Cik (ISV)
ICT Alpe Adria Workshop (1)
ROLE: Responsive Open Learning EnvironmentsAlexander Nussbaumer, Milos Kravcik, Dietrich Albert
Microlearning in Practice: Managing from Human Resour-ces to Knowledge ResourcesPeter A. Bruck
E.M.M.A. – Excellent Mobile Medical Application in Ambient Assisted Living (DALIA) Peter Danner (exthex)
MobilityCloud – Ein Konzept für den effizienten urbanen Individualverkehr der ZukunftMario Hirz (FTG)
EU-DAY Trends in HR
Smart Health (2)
Support of Reflective Learning in Health Care Sector: The MIRROR ApproachAngela Fessl (Know-Center)
Smart-Region – Interactive Dissemination Workshop
Reception ICT Alpe Adria (15.00 – 15.30)
Welcome & Intro (15.30 – 17.30)
1312
Room 1 Scientific Posters & Demos
Oliver Bieh-Zimmert, Claudia Koschtial and Carsten FeldenRepresenting Multidimensional Cancer Registry Data
Armand BrahajCapturing and Sharing Scientific Research Data
Benjamin Mühleisen, Claudio Schneider, Hans Friedrich Witschel and Christian GutknechtSuccess Factors of Enterprise 2.0
Tanja Buttler and Stephan LukoschOn the Implications of Lessons Learned Use for Lessons Learned Content
Selver Softic, Manfred Rosenberger, Alexander Stocker, Andrea Denger and Johannes FritzSemantically Based Visual Tracking of Engineering Tasks in Automotive Product Lifecycle
Wolfgang Radl, Jonatan Skopek, Anton Komendera, Stefan Jäger and Felix MödritscherAnd Data for All: On the Validity and Usefulness of Open Government Data
David Chudán and Vojtevch SvátekAdvanced Mining of Association Rules over Periodic Snapshots in a Data Warehouse
Hanan Alotaibi, Gary Wills and Richard CrowderInvestigating Factors for Knowledge Sharing Using Web Technologies
Chandan Kumar, Wilko Heuten and Susanne BollA Visual Interactive System for Spatial Querying and Ranking of Geographic Regions
Abdulbaki UzunOpenMobileNetwork
Judie Attard, Simon Scerri, Ismael Rivera and Siegfried HandschuhOntology-Based Situation Recognition for Context-Aware Systems
Ivan Ermilov, Sören Auer and Claus StadlerUser-Driven Semantic Mapping of Tabular Data
Amrapali Zaveri, Dimitris Kontokostas, Mohamed Sherif, Lorenz Bühmann, Mohamed Morsey, Sören Auer and Jens LehmannUser-Driven Quality Evaluation of DBpedia
Jose Mora and Oscar CorchoEngineering Optimisations in Query Rewriting for OBDA
Javier Fabra, Sergio Hernandéz, Estefania Otero, Juan Carlos Vidal, Manuel Lama and Pedro ÀlvarezA Practical Experience Concerning the Parallel Semantic Annotation of a Large-Scale Data Collection
Andreas RadingerBauDataWeb: The Austrian Building and Construction Materials Market as Linked Data
Andreas Thalhammer, Ioannis Stavrakantonakis and Ioan TomaDiversity-Aware Clustering of SIOC Posts
Bjørnar Tessem, Bjarte Johansen and Csaba VeresMobile Location-Driven Associative Search in DBpedia with Tag Clouds
Csaba Veres and Eivind Eidheim ElsethSchema.org for the Semantic Web with MaDaME
Panos Alexopoulos, Boris Villazón-Terrazas and Jose Manuel Gomez-PerezKnowledge Tagger: Customizable Semantic Entity Resolution using Ontological Evidence
Simon Hangl, Ioan Toma and Andreas ThalhammerIntroducing a Diversity-Aware Drupal Extension
Tanja Bergmann, Stefan Bunk, Johannes Eschrig, Christian Hentschel, Magnus Knuth, Harald Sack and Ricarda SchuelerLinked Soccer Data
Bettina Steger and Thomas KurzResource Description Graph Patterns for Configuring Linked Data Views
Kalpa Gunaratna, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan and Amit ShethTypes of Property Pairs and Alignment on Linked Datasets - A Preliminary Analysis
Belgin Mutlu, Patrick Hoefler, Vedran Sabol, Gerwald Tschinkel and Michael GranitzerAutomated Visualization Support for Linked Research Data
Stefan Bischof, Axel Polleres and Simon SperlCity Data Pipeline: Making Open Data Useful for Cities
Dominik Kowald, Sebastian Dennerlein, Dieter Theiler, Simon Walk and Christoph TrattnerThe Social Semantic Server - A Tool to Provide Services on Social Semantic Network Data
Magali Jaillard Dancette, Stéphane Schicklin and Audrey Larue TrioletA Comprehensive Microbial Knowledge Base to Support the Development of In-Vitro Diagnostic Solutions in Infectious Diseases
Linked Data Cup
Tanja Bergmann, Stefan Bunk, Johannes Eschrig, Christian Hentschel, Magnus Knuth, Harald Sack and Ricarda SchuelerGenerating a Linked Soccer Dataset
Tayfun Gokmen Halac, Bahtiyar Erden, Emrah Inan, Damla Oguz, Pinar Gocebe and Oguz DikenelliPublishing and Linking University Data Considering the Dynamism of Datasources
Michalis Vafopoulos, Marios Meimaris, Jose María Álvarez Rodríguez, Ioannis Xidias, Michael Klonaras and George VafeiadisInsights in Global Public Spending
Muhammad Saleem, Shanmukha Sampath Padmanabhuni, Axel-Cyrille Ngonga Ngomo, Jonas S. Almeida, Stefan Decker and Helena F. DeusLinked Cancer Genome Atlas Database
18.30 – 19.00
19.00
Thursday5 Sept. 2013, 15.30 – 17.30
Social Event (Dress Code: Smart Casual)
Award Ceremony
Gala Dinner and Conference Party at Conference Venue with Livemusic:
«Das Grossmütterchen HATZ Salon Orkestar» a mixture of klezmer traditions, pop, folk, rock, ska and jazz elements
«L’Orange & Sebastian Feyerabend» From Electro Pop to Minimal House
Sessions start
at 15.30
120 min
Break
Poster & Demo Session
Scientific Poster & Demo Exhibition including voting for «Best Demo»
17.30 – 18.30
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Room1
Knowledge & Data Analytics (4)
Supporting Ontology Alignment Tasks with Edge BundlingMuhammad Nasir, Orland Hoeber, Joerg Evermann
Knowledge Management in Industry (1)
Best of Both Worlds: Hybrid Knowledge Visualization in Police Crime Fighting and Military OperationsMartin Eppler, Roland Pfister
Managing Knowledge Across Disciplines and Departments For Automotive X-In-The-Loop-Simulation Thomas Gruber, Sebastian Thiel, Wolfram Hardt
Using Mobile Technology For Inter-Organisational Collaboration and End-Customer IntegrationConny Christl, Jan Hladik, Markus Graube, Reinhard Willfort, Leon Urbas
Knowledge Engineering
A Statistical and Schema Independent Approach to Identify Equivalent Properties on Linked DataKalpa Gunaratna, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan, Prateek Jain, Amit Sheth, Sanjaya Wijeratne
User-Driven Semantic Mapping of Tabular DataIvan Ermilov, Sören Auer, Claus Stadler
Perception and Relevance of Quality Issues in Web VocabulariesChristian Mader, Bernhard Haslhofer
Registration
Keynote: Aldo Gangemi (University of Paris Nord and CNR) «Objective Fiction: The Semantic Construction of (Web) Reality»
Coffee Break
9.00 – 9.30
9.30 – 10.30
10.30 – 11.00
Sessions start
at 11.00
30 min
30 min
30 min
12.30 – 14.00 Lunch Break
Friday6 Sept. 2013, 9.00 – 14.00
ICT Alpe Adria Workshop (2)
Smart-Region – Interactive Dissemination Workshop
Graphic Recording, Dissemination Strategy, Press Relations and Social Media for Researchers Including Elevator Pitch Contest Manfred Aigner (dissemination.at), Robert Lecker (Les Avignons)
i-Praxis KM in Organization Development (1)
How does Linked Data Change the Enterprize Collaboration?Andreas Koller, Helmut Nagy (Semantic Web Company)
i-Praxis Current Developments in Publishing
Brockhaus Online – Inhalt & PortaltechnikUlrike Hönsch, Michael Bolzer (Wissenmedia Bertelsmann)
API Ökosysteme in Informationsabteilungen großer OrganisationenSteffen Leich-Nienhaus (Daimler)
i-KNOW Science i-Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
i-Praxis Workshop: Licensing Linked Data
“Data licensing is a crucial step in building business around your data assets. This workshop gives an introduction into the property rights issues of data and gives recommendations how to develop a sustainable data licensing policy.“ Tassilo Pellegrini (FH St. Pölten & Semantic web Company), Christian Dirschl (Wolters Kluwer)
Extraction of Address Data from Unstructured Text using Free Knowledge ResourcesSebastian Schmidt, Simon Manschitz, Christoph Rensing, Ralf Steinmetz
Dependency Extraction from Growth Trajectory using Sequential PatternShunsuke Aoki, Ryosuke Saga, Takeo Ichinotsubo, Woyuan Niu, Hiroshi Tsuji
Brockhaus Online – Forschung und EntwicklungChristopher Koska (Wissenmedia Bertelsmann)
Lessons Learned MethodologySigmar Pallaschke (ESA)
Topic/S – A Topic and Trend Recognition Approach in News-MediaMichael Aleythe (Fink & Partner Media Services)
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Room1Room1
Closing Keynote: Yves Raimond (BBC)«Current and Future Uses of Semantic Web Technologies at the BBC»
Farewell and Coffee: Stefanie Lindstaedt (Know-Center, TU Graz),
Michael Granitzer (University of Passau),Tassilo Pellegrini (St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences),
Harald Sack (Hasso-Plattner-Institut, University of Potsdam)
Sessions start
at 14.00
30 min
30 min
15.00 – 16.00
16.00 – 17.00
Friday6 Sept. 2013, 14.00 – 17.00
Knowledge & Data Analytics (5)Semantic Pattern TransformationPeter Teufl, Herbert Leitold, Reinhard Posch
Exploratory Search and Content Discovery: The Semantic Media Browser (SMB)Kris Krois, Klaus Gasteier, Frantisek Hrdina
Knowledge Management in Industry (2)
Aligning Knowledge Development between Innovation-Driven Context and Knowledge Organization SystemsJörgen Jaanus, Tobias Ley
Professional Management of Intellectual Capital in the Automotive Industry of Baden-WürttembergManfred Bornemann, Kay Alwert
i-KNOW Science i-KNOW Praxis i-SEMANTICS EU-Day Additional Sessions
i-Praxis
KM in Organization Development (2)
SMEs in ChangeBarbara Kump (FH Wien)
Supporting the Innovation Process with Knowledge Management ToolsKarin Grasenick (convelop)
i-Praxis
Social Media in Industry
Siemens Internal Social Media Technologies - TechnoWebMichael Heiss (Siemens)
3 – 5 September 2014 in Graz
See you next year
ICT Alpe Adria Workshop (3)
Smart-Region – Interactive Dissemination Workshop
Graphic Recording, Dissemination Strategy, Press Relations and Social Media for Researchers Including Elevator Pitch Contest Manfred Aigner (dissemination.at), Robert Lecker (Les Avignons)
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ertain areas have kept their status over the years (i.e. Cataloging & Classification or Machine Assisted KnowledgeOrganization), g ),
new areas of research have entered the discipline (i.e. Metadata Applications & Uses, Classifying Web Informationnteroperability Issues) and others have declined ordissolved into other areas;
metadata issues have significantly increased in importancen terms of the quantity of papers that is explicitly andmplicitly dealing with corresponding issues.(2008). Knowledge organization trends in rnal of Information Science, 34/5, 2008, p.
iences St. Pölten, Licensing Linked Data 4
M t d t N t kMetadata as a Network
leva
nce
Content-Assets
Metadata-Assets
onom
icR
e
Information Load
Eco
Source: Haase, Kenneth (2004). Context for Semantic Metadata.
In: MM’04, October 10–16, 2004, New York, New York, USA. ACM
„The Value of Metadata rises as the product of the log community iMetcalf
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
Metcalf
k G dk Good
Price Waterhouse Coopers (2009). Technology Forecast: Spinning a Web of Data. Spring 2009
of the corpus size and the log of the size of the userncreases.“ fe`s Law
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 5
fe s Law
D t i th C t t V lData in the Content ValContent Acquisition
ContentEditing
ContentBundling
Harvesting, storage &
Semanticanalysis,
Contextualisa& perso‐nalisag
integration ofinternal orexternal datasources forpurposes like
yadaptation & linking of datafor purposeslike Content Enrichment
pof informationproducts forpurposes likeLanding PageDossiers orpurposes like
Content Pooling
Enrichment Dossiers orCustomizedDelivery
Pellegrini, Tassilo (2012). Semantic Metadata in the News Production Process. AKä kkäi H (Ed ) P di f th 16th I t ti l A d i Mi dT
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
Kärkkäinen, Hannu (Eds). Proceeding of the 16th International Academic MindT
Ch iue ChainContentDistribuiton
ContentConsumption
ationation
Provision ofmachine‐readable
Improvedfindability,
n
es,
& semanticallyinteroperable data& metadata via APIs or Endpoints
ynavigability & visualization on top of semanticmetadata via Semantic SearchSemantic Search& Recommenda‐tion Engines
Achievements and Challenges. In: Lugmayr, Artur; Franssila, Heljä; Paavilainen, Janne; k C f 2012 T / Fi l d ACM SIGMM 125 133
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 6
rek Conference 2012, Tampere / Finland. ACM SIGMM, p. 125‐133
D t T ffi P ttData Traffic Patterns
Source: Andreas Blumauer, SemanProf. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, Universit
Pölten, Licensing Lin
ntic Web Company, 2011y of Applied Sciences St. nked Data 7
Creating Licengfor Linke
nsing Policiesged Data
Licenses on the LODLicenses on the LOD Cloud – State of the Art1) Licensing has long been neglected, but
awareness is rising2) High heterogeneity of licenses (CC ODC GPL2) High heterogeneity of licenses (CC, ODC, GPL,
APACHE, individual licenses …)3) Insufficient / unappropriate protection of
intellectual assets (not all asset types areintellectual assets (not all asset types arecovered)
4) The „meaning“ of the various licenses staysimplicit – source of errors & legal uncertaintyimplicit source of errors & legal uncertainty
A community discussion & standardizationprocess is required to nuture a licensing culturep q gfor Linked Data
See also Prateek et al. (2013): There is no money in
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, University of Applied S
LOD (http://knoesis.wright.edu/faculty/pascal/pub/nomoneylod.pdf)
License Number of Datasets
License Not Specified 251License Not Specified 251
Creative Commons Attribution 135
Creative Commons CCZero 72
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 71 pear
)
Creative Commons Attribution Share‐Alike 71
Creative Commons Non‐Commercial (Any) 49
Other (Attribution) 38
UK O G t Li (OGL) 36 2013
… t
oap
p
UK Open Government Licence (OGL) 36
Open Data Commons Open Database License (ODbL) 28
Open Data Commons Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) 27
rini&
Erm
ilov
2
Other (Not Open) 26
Other (Open) 25
Other (Public Domain) 25
ourc
e: P
elle
gr
Open Data Commons Attribution License 14
GNU Free Documentation License 9
Other (Non‐Commercial) 9
LOD
Clo
ud (
S
ukcrown‐withrights 6
W3C 1
apache 1
cens
eson
the
gpl‐2.0 1
gpl‐3.0 1
Lic
ciences St. Pölten, Licensing Linked Data9
Wh Li k d D t LiWhy Linked Data LicensD i i ll l d• Data is an intellectual asset and caproperty rightsLi ( ) t i• Licenses secure (y)our property rigpurposes!
• Licenses create a secure business e• Licenses create a secure business e• Licenses allow to build a business aLi ffi i t t• Licenses are an efficient means to
• Dual Licensing can be used to exteto reuse share and consume datato reuse, share and consume dataintended
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
i M tt ?sing Matters?b d b i lll ln be protected by intelllectual
ht f i t d blights – for private and public
environmentenvironmentaround (y)our assetsdi if b i d ldiversify business modelsnd traditional copyright and allowfor purposes not originallyfor purposes not originally
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 10
Protecting Data as IntelProtecting Data as IntelLegal Prot
Copyright DatabRighg
Instance Data Case by Case yes
d b
LinkedData
Metadata Case by Case yes
Ontology yes yesData
Assets Content yes no
(Services) yes no(Services) yes no
(Technology) yes noegrini, Tassilo (2012). Semantic Metadata in the News Production Process. Achievements and Challenges
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, University of Applied S
g , ( ) g16th International Academic MindTrek Conference 2012, Tampere / Finland. ACM SIGMM, p. 125‐133
lectual Propertylectual Propertytection Instruments
ase ht
Unfair Practice
Patents
s yes Case by Case
s yes no
s yes Case by Case
yes no
yes yesyes yes
yes yess. In: Lugmayr, Artur; Franssila, Heljä; Paavilainen, Janne; Kärkkäinen, Hannu (Eds). Proceeding of
Sciences St. Pölten, Licensing Linked Data 11
g y , ; , j ; , ; , ( ) g
C t f Li k dComponents of a LinkedA Linked Data licensing policy should consist of thrabout content‐related assets (copyright), a machinassets (database right) and a human‐readable Com
• Herein the contents of a linked dataset, which aontological structure, are protected by copyrightg p y py g
• The underlying database, which is comprised of arranged in a systematic or methodological wayarranged in a systematic or methodological way are protected by database right (or Open Data C
• And additionally to these two aspects the Commthe rights holder towards good conduct when th
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
d D t Li i P lid Data Licensing Policyree components: a machine‐readable statement ne‐readable statement about database‐related mmunity Norm.
re comprised of the terms, definitions and its t (or Creative Commons).( )
all independent elements and works that are and are accessible by electronic or other meansand are accessible by electronic or other means, Commons).
munity Norm explicitly defines the expectations of he datasets are being utilized.
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 12
Benefits & Limitations oBenefits & Limitations o/ Datebase Right• Benefits:
• Easy to handle: rights are usually granted au• Internationally established institutions & ex• Strong property rights are often the foundat
• Limitations:• Very restrictive – not suiteable to generate nVery restrictive not suiteable to generate n• Regional differences in legal issues (USA vs. • Costly & risky to diversify the IPR strategy (i.
l t “)„let go“)• Hard to enforce
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
of traditional Copyrightof traditional Copyright
utomatically at the moment of publicationperience of conduct (legal affairs, trials etc.)tion of established business models
network effects or open innovationnetwork effects or open innovationEurope).e. error prone process, learning curves, fears to
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 13
Alternative Protection IAlternative Protection ICommons
Creative Commondegrees of freedoconstraints. The vrestrictions deperestrictions depegranted by the sp
• Benefits:E bl f• Enables f
• Allows di• Allows di
b• Contribut
• Limitations:• Complexp• Might int• Requires• Hard to e
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
Hard to e
nstruments I: Creativenstruments I: Creative
ns is an extension to copyright which allows various om to repurpose content via granularly defined various licenses can be ordered within a hierarchy of nding on the usage rights and associated permissionsnding on the usage rights and associated permissions pecific license.
fi l i f i htfine granular expression of usage rightsversification of creation & distribution of assetsversification of business models
h bl dtes to the public domain
to handleterfere with etsablished business modelscultural changeenforce
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 14
enforce
Alternative Protection IAlternative Protection IData Commons
Open Data Commonto Creative Commonof restrictions depenof restrictions depengranted by the speci
• Benefits:• Enables fine• Allows diver• Allows diver• Contributes
• Limitations:• Very new in• Very new in• Might interf• Requires cu
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
• Hard to enfo
nstruments II: Opennstruments II: Open
s are an extension of Database Right and work analogue ns. The various licenses can be ordered within a hierarchy nding on the usage rights and associated permissionsnding on the usage rights and associated permissions fic license.
e granular expression of usage rightsrsification of creation & distribution of assetsrsification of business modelss to the public domain
strument work in progress / little experiencestrument – work in progress / little experiencefere with etsablished business modelsltural change
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 15
orce
C it N ICommunity Norm I• Beside licensing information expressed b• Beside licensing information expressed bDatabase Right / Open Data Commons acomponent of a Linked Data licensing po
• A norm is basically a human‐readable rebe used managed and structured as intebe used, managed and structured as inteprovide administrative information (i.e. cstructural information about the datasetattributes types of relations) and recomattributes, types of relations) and recompreferred vocabulary to secure semantic
• Community norms can differ widely in d
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
by Copyright / Creative Commons andby Copyright / Creative Commons and so called Community Norm is the third olicy.
commendation of how the data should ended by the data provider It shouldended by the data provider. It should creator, publisher, license and rights), t (i.e. version number, quantity of mmendations for interlinking (i emmendations for interlinking (i.e. c consistency).
epth and complexity.
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 16
C it N II ECommunity Norm II: Ex
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
http://www.embeddedmetadata.org/embedded-
lxamples
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 17
metatdata-manifesto.php, accessed July 4, 2013
Ri ht E i LRights Expression Langu• Rights Expression Languages are used to expressreadable way.
• A prominent example is ODRL (Open Digital RighA prominent example is ODRL (Open Digital Righrights, rules, and conditions ‐ including permissiointeracting with online content. See: http://www
• ODRL utilizes an Entity‐Attribute‐Value Model toi t d ith di it l t f tassociated with a digital artefact.
• BUT: ODRL does not provide a licensing attributevocabularies like CCREL.
• There are several possibilities how to provide th• as an annotation of the HTML document using RDFa• as a complementary document, which reflects the i
or other notation), ),• as a public SPARQL endpoint, which can be queried • as a dump file.
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
I ODRLuages I: ODRLs usage rights about a digital asset in a machine‐
hts Language), an RDF/XML vocabulary to expresshts Language), an RDF/XML vocabulary to express ons, prohibitions, obligations, and assertions ‐ for w.w3.org/cumunity/odrl/o express a policy about rights and restrictions
e. This must be added by referring to other
e licensing information: a, nformation on the page for machines (RDF/XML, N3, Turtle
by applications and users,
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 18
Ri ht E i LRights Expression Langu• The Creative Commons Community has developmachine‐readable format. See http://www.w3.ohttp://creativecommons.org/schema.rdf
• Although never acknowledged as an official W3C• Although never acknowledged as an official W3Cfacto standard for the special domain of Creativewith the increasing need to explicate licensing in
• CCREL complements the ODRL vocabulary. It proCCREL complements the ODRL vocabulary. It proof properties that define the actions allowed witseamlessly integrated into the ODRL vocabulary and constraints associated with a certain asset.A bi ti f ODRL d CCREL i t bli t• A combination of ODRL and CCREL is not obligatosufficient to simply annotate existing assets withBut in case of very complex and differentiated usis recommended, as ODRL provides the necessar
li i i t d ith t i t thusage policies associated with a certain asset thainformation, i.e. for various user groups or stake
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
II CCRELuages II: CCRELed CCREL to represent the various CC licenses in a org/Submission/CCREL/ or
C recommendation CCREL has evolved into a deC recommendation, CCREL has evolved into a de e Commons Licenses and is expected to spread nformation for automated processing on the web.ovides a condensed and hierarchically ordered setovides a condensed and hierarchically ordered set th certain licenses. These properties can be and allow to define fine‐granular usage policies
Th ti i it f CCREL iory. The semantic expressivity of CCREL is h licensing information for automated processing. sage scenarios a combination of ODRL and CCREL ry semantic expressivity to define fine‐granular t b d th i l li ti f li iat go beyond the simple explication of licensing holders.
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 19
Rights Expression LanguRights Expression LanguExamples• One RDF triple is enough to attach licenslicense URI is dereferenceable and descrCreative Commons Foundation. Here is acan be attached to the asset (ex:myImag
• @prefix ex: <http://example org/>@prefix ex: <http://example.org/>.• @prefix cc: <http://creativecommons.org/n• ex:myImage cc:license <http://creativecomm
• Such an RDF document usually complemweb page, where the licensing informatireadable fashion (i e with HTML) Therereadable fashion (i.e. with HTML). ThereRDF document. On the other hand, suchreference to the license. Thus, an applicathe information necessary for telling its uy g
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
uages III: CCRELuages III: CCREL
se information to the work, given that the ribed by RDF vocabulary provided by a basic example of how the CC‐BY license pge):
ns#>.mons.org/licenses/by/3.0/> .
ments an asset (an image in our case) on a on should be represented in a human‐e is no need for a casual user to read thee is no need for a casual user to read the h an RDF document contains only the ation has to follow this reference to attain user how this asset can be processed.p
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 20
Rights Expression LanguRights Expression LanguExamples• Each RDF license includes the necessary information encoded in RDF, such as what is allowed and what is
hibi d F l h CC BY SAprohibited. For example, the CC‐BY‐SA 3.0 used in the example is represented as follows:Th d f th CC BY li d fi• The code of the CC‐BY license defines its URI, legal code, title and other attributes.
• The most important properties of this• The most important properties of this license are stated on lines 9 ‐ 13: an asset under this license can be distributed, reproduced and made , pderivation from (cc:permits) if notice, sharealike and attribution are provided (cc:requires).
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
uages IV: CCRELuages IV: CCREL
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 21
Ri ht E i LRights Expression Langu• In contrast to Creative Commons who have• In contrast to Creative Commons, who have provided CCREL as a machine readable language to express licensing information, ODC licenses are available as plain text onlyODC licenses are available as plain text only and thus not easily processable by machines.
• But as ODC shares several attributes and characteristics with CC it is possible and reasonable to apply attributes from the CCREL b lCCREL vocabulary.
• On the right you see an example how to combine ODC licensing information with gCCREL expressions. Herein the description of the license inside the dataset about a database is the same as in the case of CCREL.
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
V ODC E luages V: ODC Examples
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 22
MappLicenses to Bu
ppingpp gsiness Models
nked Data usiness Cubeusiness Cube
Subscription
Advertising
Revenue
Certification
Affiliate Program
ModelValue Add
T ffi / SEOTraffic / SEO
Branding
Subsidies
Stakeholders
Revenue Model Legend:Subscription: Selling data & services accessAd ti i S ll id l t / d ti tAdvertising: Sell paid placements / advertisementsinside data feeds & servicesCertification: Charge for reviews, verification, compliance checks, quality assuranceAffiliate Program: Charge for affiliate links within dfeeds or servicesfeeds or servicesValue Add: Utilizing Linked Data to enhance data sservicesTraffic / SEO: Utilizing Linked Data to improvefindability & generate trafficBranding: Provide data sets, vocabs & ontologies tshape market & fuel data driven applicationsSubsidies: Public / non‐profit funding & regulatorypublishing policies
(Adopted from Brinkner (2010): http://chiefmartec.com/2010/01/8th‐linked‐data‐business‐model/) /)
ContentServices
Technology
Linked
Instance DataMetadataOntology Linked
Data Assets
Stakeholder Legend:Internal … within a company // Partners … Between strategic partners //Business to Business // B2G … Business to Government // B2C … BusinessCustomer // C2C … Customer to Customer / Co2Co … Community to Com
Mapping Licenses to BuMapping Licenses to BuDiscussion Proposal
Instance Data
Metadata Ontolo
S b idi / /Subsidies CC / ODC ODC CC / OD
Branding CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC CC / OD
Traffic / SEO CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC CC / ODTraffic / SEO / / / /
Value Add CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / OD
Affiliate Prog. CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
Certification CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
Advertising CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
bSubscription © / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
gend:
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
… Creative Commons // ODC … Open Data Commons // © … Copyright // DBR … Databa
usiness Models – Ausiness Models A
ogy Content Services Technology / App
/ / /DC CC CC / FOSS / ToT FOSS / ToT
DC CC / © CC / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
DC CC / © CC / FOSS / ToT n.r./ / /
DC CC / © CC / © / FOSS / ToT n.r.
C / DBR CC / © CC / © / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
C / DBR CC / © © / ToT © / ToT
C / DBR CC / © © / ToT © / ToT
C / DBR © © / ToT © / ToT
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 25
ase Right // FOSS … Free & Open Source License // ToT … Terms of Trade // n.r. … not re
Mapping Licenses to StMapping Licenses to StDiscussion Proposal
Instance Data
Metadata OntoloData
Internal © / DBR DBR © / DB
Partners CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
B2B CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC CC / OD
B2G CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC CC / OD
B2C CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC CC / © / ODC
C2C CC / © / ODC / DBR ODC / DBR CC / © / ODC
Co2Co CC / ODC ODC CC / ODCo2Co CC / ODC ODC CC / OD
gend:
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
… Creative Commons // ODC … Open Data Commons // © … Copyright // DBR … Databa
akeholders – Aakeholders A
ogy Content Services Technology / AppApp
R © © / ToT © / ToT
C / DBR CC / © © / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
DC CC / © CC / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
DC CC / © CC / © / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
C / DBR CC / © CC / © / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
C / DBR CC / © CC / © / FOSS / ToT FOSS / © / ToT
DC CC CC / FOSS CC / FOSSDC CC CC / FOSS CC / FOSS
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 26
ase Right // FOSS … Free & Open Source License // ToT … Terms of Trade // n.r. … not re
Li k d D t Li iLinked Data Licensing –Instance Data Metadata OInstance Data Metadata O
BBC Sports)
© / DBR CC‐BY 3.0Sports)
NYT Subject Headings)
CC‐BY 3.0 CC‐BY 3.0
The GuardianThe Guardian Music Albums)
?? ??
DBpedia CC‐BY‐SA 3.0 / GNU FDL CC‐BY‐SA 3.0 / GNU FDL CC‐B
MusicBrainz CC0 CC0
GeoNames CC‐BY 3.0 CC‐BY 3.0
end:… Creative Commons // ODC … Open Data Commons // © … Copyright // DBR … Databa
ease consider that these licensing policies have regional limitations due to differing reg
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
H th d it *– How others do it …*Ontology Content Services Technology /Ontology Content Services Technology /
App
CC‐BY 3.0 © ?? ??
CC‐BY 3.0 © ToT n.r.
?? ?? ToT n.r.
BY‐SA 3.0 / GNU FDL
CC‐BY‐SA 3.0 / GNU FDL Misc. Misc.
CC0 CC‐BY‐NC‐SA 3.0 CC‐BY‐NC‐SA 3.0 GPLv2
CC‐BY 3.0 CC‐BY 3.0 ToT ToT
ase Right // FOSS … Free & Open Source License // ToT … Terms of Trade // n.r. … not re
gulatory regimes!
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 27
Conclusion: ChallengesConclusion: ChallengesLicensing• Linked Data Licensing is technologically s• Linked Data Licensing is a context sensitiunderstanding of the intersections of tec
• Assets & stakeholders• Markets & ressourcesMarkets & ressources• Competition & cooperation• Regulatory & legal conditions• Technology & infrastructure• Technology & infrastructure
• Linked Data Licensing challenges traditioconsidered a „radical innovation“
• FUTURE: Linked Licensing Data will bringrights clearance, publishing & billing purfor ecommerce & procurement!for ecommerce & procurement!
Prof. Dr. Tassilo Pellegrini, UnivPölten, Licensin
of Linked Dataof Linked Data
simple, but business‐wise complex.ive issue and requires a goodchnology, law and business development
onal business models & culture … can be
g about new applications & services forrposes ... High transformation potential
versity of Applied Sciences St. ng Linked Data 28
Licensing of Linked DataWKD Use Case
I-Semantics Graz
Christian Dirschl, WKD
06.09.2013
Wolters Kluwer Deutschland GmbHAn Information Service Provider for Legal Information
WKD Legal & Regulatory Companies/Brands Products (Examples)- Carl Heymanns Verlag- Luchterhand- Werner Verlag- Carl Link - CW Haarfeld
- IP, Administrative Law- Civil, Family, Labor Law- Construction Law- Publications for Schools/KiTas- Public Health Insurance WKD is part of Wolters Kluwer n.v.
- Deutscher Wirtschaftsdienst
- Jurion- AnNoText- Trigon Data
- Magazin „Personalwirtschaft“ (HR Management)
- SW for Lawyers and Notaries Global Reach- Europe- North America
Asia/Pacific
Target groups- Lawyers- Accountants
Companies
WKD Tax & AccountingC i /B d P d t (E l )
- Asia/Pacific
Economic Success- Revenue 2012: €3.6 Bln
19 000 Emplo ees
- Companies- Financial Institutions- Health Sector- Administrations
Companies/Brands- Akademische Arbeits-
gemeinschaft Verlag- Addison Group- Schleupen Tax
Wago Curadata
Products (Examples)- Tax SW for Consumers- SW for Tax Accountants- SW for SMEs with focus
Controlling and Accounting
- 19.000 Employees- Listet at Amsterdam SE
- Wago Curadata
2
Architectural Overview on Search and Data Enrichment
Enrichment Preprocessing/Indexing Search
www… CrawlerUser Query
CMSImportpath
3rd PartyContent
Classification*
Index
Concept Recognition*
Query Analysis• Concept Recogn.*• Named Entity Recogn.• Semantic expansion*• Link to Taxonomy*
UGCImportpath
Metadata Recognition
Content Enrichment
Doc. Segmentation
Normalization
Search
UserI f ti
MetadataDB/Services
Search Result (Raw)
Result Analysis• Relevance Ranking
Information
CustomerContent
Index
Refinement• Data organization
(e.g. faceting)• Further analysis (e.g.
ontology, linked data)
Content
Classification*
Metadata Recognition
Content Enrichment
Concept Recognition*
Doc. Segmentation
Normalization
SearchResult(Final)
SearchFeedback
(e.g. ontology)
3
* Domain specific requirements
Usage of Linked Data in Legal Applications
4
Linked Data Publishing
vocabulary.wolterskluwer.de
5
y
Linked Data Publishing
6
Linked Data Publishing
7
Expectations on enhanced production workflow
Proprietary Content and Data
CMS and MetadataProduction Process
Linked Data Publishing
License Calculation
External DataCommercial products
Asset Database
8
Expectations on licensing information
All data sets come with a standard license in a machine-readable form
The license describes the aspect of the dataset it covers in a machine-readable form
The license describes the dataset as a whole as well as individual entities in a machine-readable form
Changes in license information aredocumented in a machine-readable form
9
Contact
Christian Dirschl
[email protected] kl dwww.wolterskluwer.de
Jurion platformhttp://www.jurion.de
LOD2 projecthttp://lod2.eu
Publinkhttp://lod2.eu/Article/Publink.html
10