Thinking about this post a decade on, I believe my question has been answered in the affirmative. Read the article.
Both DCAT and CKAN are designed to support the management and publication of open data. CKAN aligns with DCAT in several important ways.
The Link Digital paper examines these shifts and the rise of data, not just as a driver of economic value but as something to be made open and shared in the context of improving government policy-making and services and supporting civil society and a more informed citizenry.
Open data has major benefits for AI. But it is not enough for that data to be open and shareable, it also needs to be quality data.
The SPOT App is an internal online web application designed to act as an aggregation point for automated data alerts. This information comes from the police and emergency service personnel, and can concern reports of fire and accidents, notices of official road closures, and whatever else is ‘emergent’ in the emergency response space in the Australian Capital Territory.
Adoption of the latest metadata standards for describing geographic information ensures a higher level of interoperability between data portals, providing more value to end users by strengthening the whole ecosystem of geospatial data providers.