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Module 10 Open Government and Open Data PRESENTER

Module 10 Open Government and Data

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Page 1: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Module 10

Open Government and Open Data

PRESENTER

Page 2: Module 10 Open Government and Data

The (Digital) World is Changing – Digital is Changing the World “The internet has revolutionized every aspect of our lives except government

services” David Cameron, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (May, 2010)

Growing Up Digital!

Changing Sources of Truth!

2 January 13, 2015

Page 4: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Why Open Government?

Technology

Economy

Social Media

4

Expectations have changed …

- the ecosystem has changed

Don Tapscott TED

Page 6: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Opening data vs. privacy and

secrecy

While open data holds important potential

rewards it also is in tension with two key

parts of social and political life: privacy

(individuals) and secrecy (organizations).

6

Secrecy Open

data Privacy

Page 7: Module 10 Open Government and Data

7

Open Government

Open

Government Data

Government Data

Participation

and

engagement

Open Government

Objectives

Multi

Channel

Delivery Identification &

Authentication

Inter-

operability

Accessibility

Citizens’ Use

Banking

(i.e.,

taxes)

Weather

reports

Find

Information

Pay

Bills

Web

surfing

Audio

Video/

Media Research

Open Government

means different things

to different actors.

In particular, access to

data – a critical part of

Open Government – is

used in very different

ways by citizens and

governments.

Page 8: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open Government Partnership

8

Page 9: Module 10 Open Government and Data

OGP Action Plan Template

1. Introduction – explains the local

context and why Open Gov is important.

2. Open Government Efforts to Date

3. NAP Development Process –

designed to be a co-production, involving

a multi-stakeholder approach (also should

give adequate lead times, use broad

consultations, publicize the event, etc.)

4 Commitments – brief, clear and specific 9

Page 10: Module 10 Open Government and Data

10

Page 11: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Design, design, design

When discussing open data we always speak

(explicitly or implicitly) about the technology the

underlines its collection, storage, sharing,

accessing, use, diffusion, etc.

How technology is designed and set up can have a

very important effect upon how data is used.

Assuming that technology is neutral and that its

design is not, two principles were developed:

Access by Design and Privacy by Design

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Page 12: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Privacy by Design

7 Foundational Principles:

1. Proactive not Reactive; Preventative not Remedial

2. Privacy as the Default Setting

3. Privacy Embedded into Design

4. Full Functionality — Positive-Sum, not Zero-Sum

5. End-to-End Security — Full Lifecycle Protection

6. Visibility and Transparency — Keep it Open

7. Respect for User Privacy — Keep it User-Centric

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Page 13: Module 10 Open Government and Data

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Page 14: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Privacy and data

Privacy is about the ability of the individual

to control personal data.

The freedom to choose what will be

released.

For example using by design forms that

maintain the privacy of the individuals who

fill them out.

14

Page 15: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Access by Design

7 Foundational Principles:

1. Proactive not Reactive; Preventative not Remedial

2. Access embedded into Design

3. Openness and Transparency = Accountability

4. Fosters Collaboration

5. Enhances Efficient Government

6. Makes Access Truly Accessible

7. Increases Quality of Information

15

Page 16: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Push Data Out

AbD is designed to push data out rather

than making it accessible to users.

This comes with implications for

governments and public administrations

that must become

More responsive

More open

More efficient

More collaborative 16

Page 17: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Purposes of Access by Design

Accountability and

Transparency

Easy Access to Quality

Information

Collaborative and Efficient Government

17

Page 18: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Module 10

Open Data

PRESENTER

Page 19: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open Data Ecosystem - overarching view

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Open Data

Data

Technology

Policy &

Standards

Stakeholders

Resources

Users

Page 20: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open Data Framework - Key Processes

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Simple Data Lifecycle Data Publishing

Exist?Own?Value

Privacy?Legal Risks?

Principles,Resources

DECISION

Req

ues

t Tr

acki

ng

via

Op

en D

ata

Web

site

5 D

ays

5 D

ays

5 D

ays

Open Data Requests

City Staff

Community

Other Government

1.

2.

3.

Open Data Requests

Page 21: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Different data, different duty? Infrastructural data: information about

geographical, natural and infrastructural

areas. Generally not sensitive.

Public service data: about the activities

of government, tends to contain aggregate

data some of which is of a sensitive

nature.

Personal data: data that individuals would

have a legitimate right to manage access

to (health). 21

Page 22: Module 10 Open Government and Data

It’s what you do with the data…

Many concerns about

privacy violations or potential

negative impacts are not

about the data, but about the

information that can be

gathered from data that was

not designed to be

compared and manipulated.

Data

Processing

Information

22

Page 23: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open data in a digitalized society

Open data

Processing

Information

Information

Information

Processing

Information

Processing

Information

Information

Processing

Information

Information

Processing Information

23

Page 24: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Advanced analytics and mobile communications are key forces shaping

government

Advanced analytics is rated as important

by over 80% of global respondents

AUS/CAN/NZ place highest

importance on using advanced

analytics to guide better decision

making (for UAE, mobile

communications ranks 1st)

Canada and UAE stand out as a

countries that place the highest

importance on Social media impacts to

government

Mobile communications is also rated as

important (77% of participants) in all four

countries

Strongest opinion of importance in

UAE

Driving adoption of on-line service

delivery to citizens / businesses appears to

also be a global priority (more than 68% of

respondents rate this as important)

Social Media and Open Data also receive

relatively high importance scores at over

70% each

24

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Usin

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dva

nce

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Cro

wd

so

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ing

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und

ing

Very important

Important

Moderately important

Of little importance

Unimportant

Implications for Public Sector Leaders:

• What kinds of decisions would analytics support

• What barriers exist regarding analytics (vision, data, tools, HR)

• What parts of Mobile (internal / external) are most critical and

what IT requirements exist

• What initial steps have been applied to social media and open

data

Source: Public Sector Executive Survey, Question 8 How important will each of

the following forces be to how you manage and interact in the next two years?

Impact of forces on organization

Are countries able to compete with the

global trend in mobile technology as

EGovernment interface?

Page 25: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open Data as a mean to many ends

See open data as a tool in achieving your

organizational and policy objectives.

Open data in and of itself should not be

considered an end to itself.

We must try to consider open data in a

broad instrumental perspective that has a

variety of cascading effects on our

organization, workflow management, HR

needs, policy, etc.

25

Page 26: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open data

• Data and information are made available

Tools, Apps, Mashups

• Analysis of the data

People, Organizations

• Action is undertaken and change is planned

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Page 27: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Open data cannot be a panacea

Open Data is nota catch all solution to our

organizational change issues and focus on

a realistic plan to manage the change that

it can generate.

We should also be aware of the fact that

open data affects change at two levels:

Internally to the organization that produces it

Externally among the public that can access

the open data

27

Page 28: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Data and citizens

It is important to remember that different

people approach data in different manner.

Three attitudes are common:

Data unconcerned

Data pragmatism

Data fundamentalist

Page 29: Module 10 Open Government and Data

The Data Unconcerned: They are not

worried about sharing information or

about how it is used.

The Data Pragmatists: They are are

reasonably open to sharing

Data, but they expect privacy.

The Data Fundamentalists: They are not

open to sharing information unless they

are faced with compelling needs or

benefits to do so.

Page 30: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Why accepting open data?

Acceptance of open

data practices by

individuals should be

based on solid value

and engagement

practices.

Transparency

Value

Control

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Page 31: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Higher expectations

Many people today have a clear

understanding of what open data and big

data are.

They expect that both government and

private entities will handle their data in a

safe an reasonable way.

However, not all of the trust them to do so.

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Page 32: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Lessons Managing data is about managing lives –

be seen to care and be effective in

protecting that data

Open data strategies need to be

transparent, valuable, and controllable.

Open data in a highly digitalized society

leads to often unpredictable information

being produced.

Cannot be uncomfortable with lack of control

of information

32

Page 33: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Actioning the Framework - Open Data Portal

Functional Areas Data Catalogue

News/Blog/Subscribe

Data Requests

Discussion forum

Polls/Surveys

“Developer Corner”

Social media

Apps Showcase

Documentation/Links

User Experience (UX design) is important

Dynamic – need to refresh to keep interest in returning

33

Data BC – a mature portal

Page 34: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Actioning the Framework - Open Data Portal

The Data Catalogue Data search/filters

Data categories/sources

Data format options

Metadata

34

Data BC – a mature portal

Surr

ey B

.C. –

Ver

sio

n 2

Cat

alo

gue

data.gov.uk/

Page 35: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Actioning the Framework - Open Data Portal

Developer Resources

APIs increasingly important to developers for programmatic access

35

Page 36: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Actioning the Framework - Open Data Portal

The Apps Showcase

36

U.K O

ttaw

a

San

Fra

nci

sco

Toro

nto

Page 37: Module 10 Open Government and Data

Water Point Mapping System (WPMS)

http://wpm.maji.go.tz

37 © IPAC 2015

Page 38: Module 10 Open Government and Data

The LAPOR Process

1. Input

2. Verification of the Report

3. Action Report

4. Follow up Report

38 © IPAC 2015

Page 39: Module 10 Open Government and Data

LAPOR Website

https://lapor.ukp.go.id

39 © IPAC 2015

Page 40: Module 10 Open Government and Data

GAME – Stopping Open Data

Game Type: The Anti Problem

Please split into groups of 3 or 4 people.

Your goal is to Stop your organization

from implementing open data.

You have 20 minutes to generate and

display various ways to solve the anti-

problem, which we shall share at the end.

There are NO wrong answers.

40 January 13, 2015