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Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Data and Society Lecture 8: Data in the Global Landscape
4/8/16
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Announcements
• Paper due before class today.
• If you’re interested in your grade so far, come talk to Fran. (Office hours: 1-2 or by appt.)
• Bulent Yener lectures on April 22 about Data and Security!
• It looks like we will have 5-6 slots during the last 2 classes for Data Roundtable “do-overs”
– Groundrules:
• Presentation / review graded like usual
• Student gets the best 2 of 3 Roundtable grades
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Today (4/8/16)
• Lecture 8: Data in the Global Landscape
• L6 + L7 Data Roundtable
3
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Section Theme Date First “half” Second “half”
Section 1: The Data Ecosystem -- Fundamentals
January 29 Class introduction; Digital data in the 21st Century (L1)
Data Roundtable / Fran
February 5 Data Stewardship and Preservation (L2) L1 Data Roundtable / 5 students
February 12 Data-driven Science (L3) L2 Data Roundtable / 5 students
February 19 Future infrastructure – Internet of Things (L4)
L3 Data Roundtable / 5 students
February 26 Section 1 Exam L4 Data Roundtable / 5 students
Section 2: Data and Innovation – How has data transformed science and society?
March 4 Paper assignment description Section 1 Data Roundtable / 5 students
March 11 Data and Health: Phil Bourne guest lecture (L5)
Section 2 Data Roundtable / 3 students
March 18 Spring Break / no class
March 25 Data and Entertainment (L6) Section 2 Data Roundtable / 5 students
April 1 Big Data Applications (L7) Privacy Panel / 6 students
Section 3: Data and Community – Social infrastructure for a data-driven world
April 8 Data in the Global Landscape (L8) Section 2 paper due
L7 Data Roundtable / 5 students
April 15 Digital Rights in the U.S. (L9) L8 Data Roundtable / 5 students
April 22 Bulent Yener: Review of Privacy, Anonymity, and Cryptocurrency (L10)
Digital Rights Forum / 7 students
April 29 Digital Governance and Ethics (L11) L10 Data Roundtable / 5 students
May 6 Section 3 Exam L11 Data Roundtable / 5 students
We are here
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Lecture 8: Data in the Global Landscape
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Perspectives on digital data vary globally
• “Social infrastructure” around rights, privacy, data sharing vary around the world
– Complex interaction of data potential, privacy, policy, innovation driving critical national conversations
• Even for scientific communities, different national approaches to R&D investments, data sharing, stewardship and preservation, public-private partnerships vary
• At the same time, there is universal recognition of the importance of digital data as a driver for innovation and progress
– each nation finding their own solutions to common, fundamental problems within their own cultures
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Today’s lecture
• Digital Rights in Europe
• Health Data in Iceland
• International Coopetition in Research
• Research Data Alliance
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Digital Rights in Europe
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
European Union (EU) Digital Agenda
• Overall aim is to deliver sustainable economic and social benefits to Europeans from information and communication technologies.
– Europe perceives itself as lagging behind in terms of use and deployment if IT
• EU launched Europe 2020 strategy in March 2010. Digital Agenda for Europe one of the 7 flagship initiatives of the Europe 2020 Strategy.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
EU Data Challenges
• Fragmented digital markets
– 27 countries in EU, much variation between content, services, and infrastructure across boarders; unification difficult
• Lack of interoperability
– “weaknesses in standard setting”, difficulty in coordination
• Rising cybercrime and low risk of trust in networks
• Lack of investment in networks
• Insufficient research and innovation efforts
• Lack of digital literacy and skills
• Missed opportunities in addressing societal challenges
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
EU Digital Agenda Action Areas 1
• Single digital market
– Want to unify telecom, services, rules, and content
– Rights and protection for consumers and businesses when doing business on-line
• Interoperability and Standards
• Trust and security
– “Europeans will not embrace technology they do not trust – the digital age is neither ‘big brother’ nor ‘cyber wild west’.” (Digital Agenda for Europe, COM(2010) 245, 19.05.2010)
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
EU Digital Agenda Action Areas 2
• Fast and ultra fast internet access
– Universal broadband coverage, open and neutral internet
• Research and Innovation
– Leverage private investment and accelerate innovation
– Increase digital literacy, skills and services
• ICT-enabled benefits for EU society
– ICT-enabled energy, environment, health care, independent living, cultural diversity / arts, e-government, transportation.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Code of EU on-line rights
• Rights and Principles applicable when you access and use online services
– “Universal” access to electronic communication networks and services
– Access to services and applications of your choice
– Non-discrimination when accessing services provided online
– Privacy, protection of personal data and security
• Rights and Principles applicable when you buy goods or services online
– Information prior to the conclusion of a contract
– Timely, clear and complete contractual information
– Fair contract terms & conditions
– Protection against unfair practices
– Delivery of goods and services without defects and in good time
– Withdrawal from a contract
• Rights and Principles protecting you in case of conflict
– Access to justice and dispute resolution
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Individual rights
• “The right to data protection and the right to privacy are two distinct human rights recognized in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU), and in two legal instruments of the Council of Europe, to which all the EU Member States are parties.”
• New rights proposed in 2012:
– Right of portability (can access and transfer data easily from one service provider to another)
– Right to be forgotten (can access, object, correct, erase) – upheld in 2014
– New provisions on profiling
– Requirement that data controllers notify individuals in the event of a security breach in order to avoid identity fraud
– Enhancement of privacy rights of children and their right to personal data protection -- draft regulation prohibits the processing of personal data of a child below 13 without the consent of a parent or guardian.
• Proposal beefs up enforcement powers of Data Protection Authorities.
Information from the Library of Congress: https://www.loc.gov/law/help/online-privacy-law/eu.php
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Europe vs. Facebook
• Advocacy group started by Austrian University student (Max Schrems) grew to a grass-roots movement of 25,000+ people
• Issue is potential violation of EU data protection law due to personal data collected by Facebook, etc.
• Schrems filed a complaint with Irish Data Protection Commissioner alleging 22 violations of European law
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Europe vs. Facebook, 2011/2012
• Schrems claimed that Facebook collected data he never consented to provide: physical location, data he had deleted, etc. Schrems started the “Europe vs. Facebook” movement and 25,000+ other users also requested FB data.
– Legal case has been crowdfunded …
• Irish Data Protection Commissioner (DPC) started investigation
– Complaints filed in Ireland because European users have a contract with “Facebook Ireland Ltd”. Under European law, Facebook Ireland is the “data controller” for facebook.com and therefore facebook.com is governed by European data protection laws.
• Schrems eventually recovered 1,222 pages of material 57 data categories from FB in 2011
– Schrems claims that Facebook did not provide all data and that Facebook holds at least 84 data categories about every user.
• FB developed a download tool to provide users a quick overview of the data being kept on file. FB also agreed to cut the amount of time it retains data on user activities to less than one year.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Safe Harbor questioned
• Irish DPA dismissed Schrem’s original
complaint by saying that FB was
protected by Safe Harbor agreement.
• But … the Judge asked the European
Court of Justice (ECJ) to examine whether
Ireland’s data watchdog is bound by “safe
harbor” and whether an investigation
should be launched.
• Safe Harbor allows companies to self-
certify to provide “adequate protection”
for EU data users to comply with the
European data protection directive
Safe Harbor Principles:
• Notice - Individuals must be informed that their data is being collected and about how it will be used.
• Choice - Individuals must have the option to opt out of the collection and forward transfer of the data to third parties.
• Onward Transfer - Transfers of data to third parties may only occur to other organizations that follow adequate data protection principles.
• Security - Reasonable efforts must be made to prevent loss of collected information.
• Data Integrity - Data must be relevant and reliable for the purpose it was collected for.
• Access - Individuals must be able to access information held about them, and correct or delete it if it is inaccurate.
• Enforcement - There must be effective means of enforcing these rules.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Max Schrems on the eve of the EU court decision on Safe Harbor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJ1-lY0UEBA
~ 5 minutes
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
What happened after the interview
• EJC Safe Harbor ruling in 2015 invalidated Safe Harbor. (Replacement
agreement being developed for 2016)
• Schrems filed an updated complaint against Facebook with the Irish Data
Protection Authority (DPA)
– Complaint claims that EU FB users’ data being pulled into NSA surveillance programs
once it has been exported to the U.S. undermines EU data protection rights.
• Schrems also filed complaints to Belgian DPA and Hamburg DPA.
Complaints call for DPAs to suspend all data transfers from FB EU HQ to
U.S. Also calling for audit of FB as a data importer.
• Irish judgement is valid for 28 countries, Schrems is also bringing suit in
other countries to build a class-action appeal against Facebook’s internal
privacy policies.
• Latest news: http://europe-v-facebook.org/EN/en.html
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Health Data in Iceland
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Icelanders
• Iceland has a population of ~326,000 and is the most sparsely populated country in Europe.
• Iceland provides universal health care to its citizens and spends a fair amount on health care, ranking 11th in health care expenditures as a percentage of GDP and 14th in spending per capita.
– Health care system is ranked 15th in performance by the World Health Organization.
• Ethnically homogeneous. Most Icelanders descendants of Germanic and Gaelic (Celtic) settlers.
– 93% Icelandic
– 3.13% Polish
– 3.84% Other
• Iceland has extensive genealogical records dating back to the late 17th century and fragmentary records extending back to the 9th century.
Source: Wikipedia articles on Iceland, Icelanders
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Whole Country Health Data
• 1996: deCODE Genetics corporation founded to identify human genes associated with common diseases using populations studies and apply the knowledge gained to guide the development of candidate drug treatments.
• Company worked with government on the Health Sector Database Act with the intention of creating the Icelandic Health Sector Database (HSD) to merged genealogical, genetic and health records for the entire population of Iceland
– Opt-out model of presumed consent
– Services and infrastructure developed as well for mining data in HSD
• DeCODE collected full DNA sequnces on 10,000 individuals.
– Because Icelandic population is so homogeneous, DeCODE says it can
extrapolate (“impute”) to accurately guess the DNA makeup of the other 330K
citizens, including those who never participated in the studies.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Scientific results; problems with informed consent
• deCODE never built the controversial DB but pursued traditional genome-wide association studies to try to identify genetic changes contributing to common diseases
• deCODE data used for discoveries about genes that increase risk for kidney disease, cancer, lupus, vascular disease, schizophrenia, osteoporosis, etc.
– One result identified a gene that protects against Alzheimer’s
– DeCODE has identified mutations in BRCA2 that convey sharply increased risk of breast and ovarian cancers.
• Problems with informed consent
– DeCODE’s data could identify 2K people with the gene mutation but there are legal and ethical issues that prevent DeCODE from informing people who are at risk
• Inferences go “beyond informed consent”
Information from http://www.els.net/WileyCDA/ElsArticle/refId-a0005180.html
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Controversy and Transition
deCODE founded in 1996; filed for
bankruptcy in 2009
Saga Investments LLC purchased
deCODE services and assets in 2010
Amgen purchased deCODE in 2012,
spun off NextCODE Health in 2013
NextCODE acquired by WuXi
PharmaTech in 2015
• Legal judgement from the Icelandic Supreme Court effectively killed off the HSD project in 2003
– Court case focused on legal rights and rights to not participate from deceased Icelander. Legal issues included legal standing and personal rights of deceased individual, identifiability due to the richness of data
– Part of the problem was the original Health Sector Database Act which did not provide information and guidelines on how DB should be set up, who should run it, who should have access to the data, and what control Icelandic citizens should have over samples.
– Company believed it could continue to identify disease-related genes without the database
• Commercial Failure
– Studies led to development of DB and scientific results but company was a commercial failure and went bankrupt in 2009.
– Continued as private company (NextCODE) and was bought by Amgen in 2012. No compensation given to Icelanders.
• Services and assets of deCODE went through many transitions:
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Iceland / public China / private
• Website Description: “NextCODE was founded in 2013 as a spinout of Iceland’s deCODE genetics, to apply the unique population-scale genomic big data solutions developed there to realize precision medicine around the globe. WuXi NextCODE was created in 2015 through the acquisition of NextCODE by WuXi AppTec, the leading China- and US-based open-access R&D platform. NextCODE was founded in 2013 as a spinout of Iceland’s deCODE genetics, to apply the unique population-scale genomic big data solutions developed there to realize precision medicine around the globe. WuXi NextCODE was created in 2015 through the acquisition of NextCODE by WuXi AppTec, the leading China- and US-based open-access R&D platform.
• “The result is the only end-to-end global solution in the industry, bringing together NextCODE’s unrivalled bioinformatics and human genetics with the Shanghai-based WuXi Genome Center’s CAP/CLIA-sequencing and WuXi AppTec's R&D capabilities. Through partnerships and our own products we are leading the application of the genome to benefit patients and improve health worldwide.”
https://www.nextcode.com/
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
International “Coopetition” in Research
• Research and Innovation seen as key drivers for international leadership, social advancement, and economic health.
• Countries strongly influenced by “best practices” and trends in other parts of the world.
• Competition and collaboration: Scientific communities span borders and contribute to global cross-fertilization, coordination and synergy
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
OECD Comparisons: Human and Financial Resources devoted to R&D http://www.oecd.org/innovation/inno/researchanddevelopmentstatisticsrds.htm
• OECD: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
– Provides a forum for sharing best practices and metrics and measures of global standing
BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Researchers per 1000 professionals • U.S. greater than
OECD average • U.S.: 8.74 • Countries with
average > U.S. in 2012: – Finland – Iceland – Sweden – Japan – Denmark – Canada – Singapore – Slovenia – Korea – Belgium, etc.
http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/industry-and-services/researchers/indicator/english_20ddfb0f-en?isPartOf=/content/indicatorgroup/09614029-en
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Research as measured by publication citation
Top 10% most cited papers [Graph from Nao Tsunematsu]
US
DE
KR
FR CN JP
UK
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Open Science data sharing drives greater innovation
• International community adopting various strategies to promote open science and create a driving infrastructure of open data.
• Strategies include:
– Digital data storage infrastructure (repositories and archives, libraries in research centers and governments)
– Open data (digital format for research outputs, open government)
– Open access (open licenses for datasets and libraries, publication in open access journals or open resources
– Greater focus on collaboration
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Global focus on infrastructure, services and data sharing policies to optimize data-driven innovation
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
International efforts – the Research Data Alliance
RDA Plenary 3
Dublin, Ireland
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Slide courtesy of Kim Fortun, RDA Digital Practices in History and Ethnography Interest Group
Are you more likely to get asthma if you live in Mexico City
or Los Angeles?
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Making the data available is not enough
• Infrastructure needed to make data useful
– Data is not an asset if you don’t know what it means.
– Data is not useful if you can’t find it.
– Data needs to be in the right form for analysis.
– Data needs to be preserved for results to be reproducible.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Data Sharing Policy
Interoperability Frameworks
Data Discovery Tools
Common Metadata Standards
Digital Object Identifiers
Sustainable Economics
Data Analytics Algorithms
Domain and Institutional Repositories
Data Access and Distribution Policy
Data Citation Standards
Curation Practice and Policy
Auditing, Certification and Reporting Practice
Fran Berman
What kind of infrastructure do we need?
Who is at risk
for asthma?
How do we increase agricultural
productivity?
How accurate is the Standard Model of
Physics?
What will happen in an
earthquake?
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Accelerating the development of infrastructure worldwide – the Research Data Alliance
Research Data
Alliance (RDA)
rd-alliance.org:
Global community-
driven
organization whose
mission is to build the
social and technical
bridges
(infrastructure) that
enable data sharing.
Launched: March, 2013
Membership: 3700+ from 110 countries, all sectors, and a broad spectrum of domains
Representation: 2/3 academic sector, 1/3 public, private sectors; ~1200+ participants in the U.S.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
RDA Members come together as
• Working Groups (WG) – 12-18 month efforts to build, adopt, and use specific pieces of
infrastructure
• Interest Groups (IG) – longer-lived discussion forums that spawn Working Groups as specific
pieces of needed infrastructure are identified.
RDA culture focuses on the pragmatic:
• No “build it and they will come” -- Working Groups must incorporate adopters
• Avoid universal “esperanto” infrastructure -- Infrastructure must solve someone’s problem but not necessarily everyone’s problems
• Promote technology-neutrality -- RDA not a platform for specific infrastructure promotion or endorsement
• No “world domination” – partner with other organizations to achieve mutual goals
• Amplify infrastructure impact when possible
RDA Approach: Solve Problems, Make Progress
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
• Federated identity management
• Domain repositories
• Preservation e-infrastructure
• Repository platforms for research data
• Big data analytics
• Data Fabric
• Geospatial data
• Biodiversity data integration
• Digital practices in History and Ethnography
• Marine Data harmonization
• RDA/CODATA Materials data, infrastructure and interoperability
• Structural biology
• Community Capability Model
• Development of Cloud computing in the Developing World
• Long tail of research data
• Quality of urban life
• Libraries for Research Data
• Research data needs of Photon and Neutron Science communities
• Archiving multimedia interactive / dynamic data and projects
• RDA/CODATA legal interoperability
• RDA/WDS Publishing Data Cost Recovery for Centers
• Research Data Provenance
• Certification of digital repositories
Data Provider BENEFICIARY Data Consumer
Tech
nic
al
S
OLU
TIO
N
So
cial
Focus of RDA Working and Interest Groups: What kind of infrastructure is needed to solve problems?
Technical solution aimed at data provider
“repository, fabric, data
dissemination, data publication, analytics, infrastructure, data
management
Technical solution aimed at data consumer
“interoperability, harmonization, integration, metadata, knowledge
organization”
Social/organizational solution aimed at data
consumer
“data literacy, education, bridging, community, research practices,
values/ethics”
Social/organizational solution aimed at data
provider
“governance, certification, metrics/evaluation, cost recovery, citation, legal”
TAB Clustering slides adapted from Beth Plale
Tech
nic
al
S
OLU
TIO
N
So
cial
rd-alliance.org
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Focus of RDA Working Groups: Build infrastructure and support its adoption by communities of use
• Data type registries
• PID information types
• Practical policy
• RDA/WDS Publishing Data workflows
• Data Citation
• Biosharing Registry
• Metadata standards catalogue
• Data description registry interoperability
• Wheat data interoperability
• RDA/WDS Publishing Data Services
• RDA/CODATA summer schools in data science and cloud computing in the developing world
• RDA/WDS Publishing Data Biometrics
• Metadata standards directory
• Dynamic Data Citation
• Data foundation and terminology
• RDA/WDS publishing data cost recovery for data centers
• Brokering Governance
• Repository Audit and Certification DSA-WDS Partnership
• Standardization of Data Categories and codes
Data Provider BENEFICIARY Data Consumer
Tech
nic
al
S
OLU
TIO
N
So
cial
TAB Clustering slides adapted from Beth Plale
rd-alliance.org
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Selected RDA Working Group Recommendations / outputs
Working Group Outputs Impact Adopters
Dynamic Data Citation
Working Group
(data consumer, social
solution)
Dynamic-data citation
methodology that supports
efficient processing of data
and linking from publications
Researchers can reference
precise subsets of changing
data
NERC, ESIP, CLARIN, Virtual
Atomic and Molecular
Data Centre
Data Type Registries
Working Group
(data provider, technical
solution)
Data type model and
prototype registry
Provides machine-readable
and researcher-accessible
registries of data types that
support the accurate use of
data
CNRI, International DOI
Foundation, Materials
Genome Initiative, Deep
Carbon Observatory,
EUDAT
Wheat Data
Interoperability Working
Group
(data consumer, technical
solution)
Common framework for
Wheat Data Terminology to
enable interoperability
between distinct data
collections
Semantically linked terms
describing wheat data so
researchers can share
harvest and related
information between data
sets and communities
Wheat Initiative
Information System, FAO
AIMS, INRA
rd-alliance.org
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
RDA Wheat Data Interoperability WG
• Focus: Agricultural productivity to feed the planet is a major societal challenge. What data interoperability can be developed to help address agricultural productivity challenges?
• Solution approach: Make critical data sets for agricultural interoperable by agreeing on a common set of
– Metadata standards
– Data formats
– Vocabularies
– Guidelines for distributing, representing, and linking data
What they’re doing:
• WG building an interactive “cookbook” with recommendations and guidelines on data format and standards
• Developing common wheat-related vocabularies and including them in a human and machine-readable bio-portal
• Building a prototype interoperability framework for specific use cases.
Esther Dzalé Yeumo, France
Richard Fulss, Mexico
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
WG enabling more effective agricultural research
Portal image from the RDA Outputs booklet, 2015 https://rd-alliance.org/rda-outputs.html
Adoption and next steps:
• Framework will be
incorporated into the
Wheat Information System
of the Global Wheat
Initiative, Coherence in
Information for
Agricultural Research for
Development (CIARD), etc.
• Subsequent work:
Framework will be adapted
to other crops such as Rice
and Maize.
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Community Building: RDA Plenaries
Co-located meetings with RDA Plenaries:
• Data Citation Summit (Force 11, DataCite, etc.)
• BioCADDIE
• PASIG
• World Bank Workshop
• Climate Data Challenge
• Joint Data Preservation Workshop
• Data Seal of Approval Conference
• Earthcube Hackathon
• 3rd EUDAT Conference, etc.
RDA Plenary 1 Gothenburg,
Sweden
RDA Plenary 2
Washington, DC RDA Plenary 3
Dublin, Ireland
RDA Plenary 4
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
RDA Plenary 4
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
RDA Plenary 5 San Diego, California
RDA Plenary 6 Paris, France
RDA Plenary 7
Tokyo, Japan
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
• RDA/US Membership: Currently
1200+ members from 45+ states)
• RDA/US Mission: Build RDA
community in the U.S. and
leverage RDA momentum to
advance the U.S. data community
Top 10: California, Washington DC, New York, Maryland, Virginia, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Texas
RDA/US: Enriching the data community within the U.S.
RDA/US: All U.S. members of RDA
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
RDA/US 2016 Programs and Initiatives
Student/Early Career program (NSF, Sloan)
Targeted Outreach Workshops with data-enabled communities and organizations (NSF)
Joint Partnership Agreements between RDA/US and U.S.-based organizations to co-sponsor activities and events that build the RDA community (CENDI, NDS, ICPSR)
Adoption Amplification seed projects for RDA deliverables (NSF, MacArthur)
Partial support for the RDA-NISO Working Group on Privacy Implications of Research Data Sets (Sloan)
Emerging Initiatives: RDA/US Archivist, Publications, RDA Testbed
Hosting and U.S. participant
support for WG Coordination Meetings (NIST)
Development of RDA/US Website and
Communications (NSF)
Planning for U.S.-hosted Plenaries (NSF and sponsors)
International Participant Support for U.S. RDA leadership for non-U.S. Plenaries (NSF)
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Lecture 7 Sources (not already on slides)
• Europe vs. Facebook in TechCrunch http://techcrunch.com/2015/12/03/schrems-steps-up-mass-surveillance-fight-against-facebook/
• EU Privacy Laws, https://www.loc.gov/law/help/eu-data-retention-directive/eu.php
• Research Data Alliance, http://rd-alliance.org
• “Genome study predicts DNA of the whole of Iceland,” MIT Technology Review, http://www.technologyreview.com/news/536096/genome-study-predicts-dna-of-the-whole-of-iceland/
• “NextCODE Health Mines deCODE’s Data, and More, to Catalyze Clinical Diagnosis”, PLOS
• “An analysis of the Icelandic Supreme Court judgement on the Health Sector Database Act”, http://www2.law.ed.ac.uk/ahrc/script-ed/issue2/iceland.asp
• Biology Blog, blogs.plos.org/dnascience/2013/11/14/nextcode-health-mines-decodes-data-and-more-to-catalyze-clinical-diagnosis
• “Facebook data privacy case to be heard before European Court,” The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/mar/24/facebook-data-privacy-european-union-court-maximillian-schrems
• Europe versus Facebook, http://www.europe-v-facebook.org/EN/en.html/
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
April 22 Forum: Where do/could the Candidates Stand? Questions/topics from the Electronic Frontier Foundation
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/02/putting-digital-rights-spotlight-2016
• EFF Questions/Topics for the Presidential Candidates (Clinton, Cruz, Kasich, Sanders, Trump)
– Each student takes a topic; talks for 7 minutes and answers questions for 5 minutes
– In your talk,
• Describe the topic and the issues in some detail
• Describe the views of the candidates based on whatever information you can obtain or infer.
– Each student also writes a 3-4 page review on the area and the candidates’ views and turns it in on April 22
• Topics (continued on next slide) – each student do only one
– Surveillance (Ethan B.) • What are your views regarding further restrictions on domestic surveillance to finish the job that Congress started with
the USA Freedom Act?
• What are your views regarding the authority for domestic NSA surveillance under executive order 12333, which was announced in 1981 to authorize foreign intelligence collection but revealed in 2013 by a State Department whistleblower to have been frequently cited as a legal basis for secret domestic surveillance?
– Privacy (Courtney T.)
• Where do you stand regarding efforts by intelligence agencies to undermine encryption tools, such as the FBI's demands of Apple?
• What are your views regarding efforts to update the Electronic Communications Privacy Act to reflect recent reforms already adopted in states including California?
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
April 22 Forum: Where do/could the Candidates Stand? Questions/topics from the Electronic Frontier Foundation
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/02/putting-digital-rights-spotlight-2016
• The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) (Evan F.)
– Do you support the proposed TPP agreement? Why or why not?
– The TPP text was finally posted online after more than five years of negotiations. What are your views regarding whether to make trade agreements more transparent and democratic?
• Open access (Aima M.)
– Through various departmental grant programs, our federal government funds billions of dollars’ worth of grants intended to benefit the public. Do you think that federally funded research, educational materials, and cultural works should be made freely available to the public? Why or why not?
– What are your views regarding federal mandates requiring open licensing for federally funded content?
• Copyright (Theo B.)
– Looking forward, one of the most crucial digital freedom issues is: who will control the hardware in your home, in your pocket, and in your own body. Will you work to protect consumers' right to circumvent access controls on products they own and otherwise defend our freedom to tinker, repair, re-use and modify our stuff?
– Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act forbids users from breaking DRM (digital rights management) on works subject to copyright, even if the purpose is a clearly lawful fair use. What are your views regarding reforms to address this issue?
• Patent reform (Aesa K.)
– Would you endorse a comprehensive patent litigation reform bill to protect innovators from patent trolls?
– Would you endorse a venue reform bill, making it more difficult for parties in patent suits to shop for favorable forums?
• Transparency
– What are your views regarding whistleblowers who risk their careers to expose secret information important to the public interest?
– Under your administration, will there be consequences for intelligence officials who mislead Congress in response to direct questions at oversight hearings, or for agencies that misuse technology to cover up crimes, like when the CIA hacked into Congressional files to steal evidence of international human rights abuses?
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
April 15: L8 Data Roundtable
• “France violating free speech rights”, USA Today, http://www.news-press.com/story/opinion/2016/03/30/france-violating-free-speech-rights/82425946/ (Jessica J.)
• “Denmark Ranks as Happiest Country; Burundi, Not So Much”, New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/17/world/europe/denmark-world-happiness-report.html?smprod=nytcore-iphone&smid=nytcore-iphone-share&_r=0 (Courtney Y.)
• “The Crypto Wars are Global“, Motherboard, http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-crypto-wars-are-global (Sri I.)
• “This student put 50 million stolen research articles online. And they’re free,” Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/this-student-put-50-million-stolen-research-articles-online-and-theyre-free/2016/03/30/7714ffb4-eaf7-11e5-b0fd-073d5930a7b7_story.html (TK W.)
• “China Rejects Worry Over Domain Rules,” Zdnet, http://www.zdnet.com/article/china-rejects-worry-over-domain-rules/ (Kienan K-B)
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Data Roundtable
Fran Berman, Data and Society, CSCI 4370/6370
Data Roundtable Today
• “The Shazam Effect”, The Atlantic, http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/12/the-shazam-effect/382237/?single_page=true (Arun V.)
• “Six Provocations for Big Data”, Oxford Internet Institute Network Conference, http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1926431 (Kit H.)
• “Data lake governance: A big data do or die”, TechTarget, http://searchcio.techtarget.com/feature/Data-lake-governance-A-big-data-do-or-die (Aima M.)
• “Water Data is Broken. Fix it”, NY Times Op Ed, http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/17/opinion/the-water-data-drought.html?_r=0 (Wissal L.)
• “Data Wars Target Omni-present American Voter”, Deutsche Welle, http://www.dw.com/en/data-wars-target-omni-present-american-voter/a-19026212 (Chris P.)
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