Transcript
Page 1: National Information Infrastructure and Open Data

National Information Infrastructure and Open

Data

APPSI

20 April 2012

Page 2: National Information Infrastructure and Open Data

What is the NII?• A broad approach to maximising the value of

information to the nation and to society

• A representation of a Government Information Strategy

• An information parallel to the National (physical) Infrastructure

• A structured approach to releasing the greatest benefit from our information

• A manageable initiative to create, make readily available and publicise an entity and framework to promote availability and best practice in fostering openness and the information ecosystem

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What topics are covered in the NII?

• Data, policies about its availability, standards, applications of the data, producers and users, tools, organisations involved, etc.

• Potentially, all relevant data matters are in scope

• Realistically, focussed on information and processes that government can most readily influence – and are high priorities

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What information is in the NII?

• Potentially a wide range of data but focussed first on PSI

• Not just central government data - devolved governments, LAs, health, etc, private sector involved in public (and infrastructure, communications) services plus independent and voluntary sectors where they too provide publicly funded or (tax-) subsidised services

• PSI is a wide definition and is sometimes blended with data from non-public sources

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Private data in the NII

• Can be personal or commercial confidential

• Public confidence must be assured

• Anonymity must be assured

• There are proven good ways to release anonymised sensitive data

• There are good precedents and current action e.g. Census SARs, OIC initiative, Scottish government consultation on data linkage http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2012/03/3260

An important element of PSI - needs special attention

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Who are the data providers for NII?

• Central government departments

• Devolved administrations

• Key public facing sectors such as local government, health and social services

• Near-government (e.g. transport, privatised utilities, those who government pays)

• Non-government sources where there is a public sector interest

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What are the NII applications?

• A vast array – known and unknown

• There is a need to better understand usage and applications for input to prioritisation and investment

• The pace of change in electronic methods will greatly increase the scope and value of data

The NII is a living entity

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Is the NII the same as Open Data?

• The NII is a broader concept that embraces Open Data

• Government plans for OD are a relevant and important component of the NII

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Which public bodies have an NII role?

• Cabinet Office, BIS, other Departments, devolved administrations, ICO, UKSA, NA/APPSI, DSB/ODI/PDG, LGA, NHS and many others

• There is a need to rationalise roles and responsibilities for the NII

• Lead responsibility might be vested in an existing entity, at least initially

The NII should be UK-wide with logical devolved variants

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Why is the NII so important?

• The information economy is already worth £billions and growing rapidly

• The UK should be best placed to make the most of this

• There is considerable waste from duplication and data misuse

• Better data availability in the widest sense will lead to better applications – quality, relevance, openness, value

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Key NII issues• Establishing a centre of excellence• Seeking/demonstrating benefits from information• Stimulation of growth and openness• Regulation and inducements• Priorities• Research and skills development• Guidance to producers and users• Efficiency• Quality – promotion and review• Standards, protocols, terminology and metadata• Data intermediaries• Charging & licensing

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APPSI recommendations (1)

• Government should provide a clear and explicit strategic vision on its role in information collection, dissemination and exploitation

• Policy should facilitate better public/private sector cooperation and innovation

• White Paper should build in the NII concept

• Open Data should be recognised as a component and key stepping stone to NII

• The wider NII framework should be recognised as key to success

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APPSI recommendations (2)• The DSB should be considered as the initial

leader of a NII• Personal data needs special attention• Enhancing human capital is central to

delivering Open Data/NII success• NII is a living thing so must anticipate new data

needs, enforce standards, evaluate old data series for continuing value

• Further discussion and investigation of the NII is now required – and APPSI is happy to be involved

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Next steps?


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