Category: Government

It is no newsflash that governments at all levels are using data more to improve public policy and meet both the increasingly complex challenges they face and the expectations of a more data literate business sector and citizenry. Much of this data comes from what might be termed traditional sources – official statistics, surveys and censuses, etc. But, as a recent Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) report on government innovation identified, governments are increasingly drawing on non-traditional data sources to help design and implement better services. They are also using experimental tools to help navigate difficult and unpredictable environments. One popular tool utilising non-traditional data sources the OECD highlights is simulations known as a digital twin.

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We have grown used to reading and hearing about the enormous potential of artificial intelligence (AI). The rapidly evolving nature of the technology makes it difficult to pinpoint specific shifts in the relationship between AI and open data. But one emerging discussion that Link Digital is keen to highlight concerns the proposition that the intersection between the two involves far more than open data’s role as raw material to train and operate large machine learning models, the focus of so much of the commentary to date.

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One of the many areas of action required to deal with the global climate crisis is building climate resilience—the ability to prepare for, recover from, and adapt to climate change impacts. Open data portals—front-facing web applications designed to make data more discoverable and easier to share and interpret—are vital to ensuring stakeholders get the high-quality, up-to-date data necessary for more effective climate resilience measures.

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