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SI LIVE Closing Session - Peter Baeck on Digital Social Innovation

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SI LIVE Closing Session - Peter Baeck on Digital Social Innovation

  1. 1. Digital Social Innovation SI Live Lisbon 13.11.2014 Peter Baeck, Principal Researcher, Nesta peter.baeck@nesta.org.uk @PeterBaeck
  2. 2. Three overarching objectives Defining and understanding the potential in Digital Social Innovation Crowdmapping and engaging organisations working on, supporting and delivering DSI and how they are connected Developing recommendations for how policy, funding and regulatory measures can be changed to better support DSI
  3. 3. Sept: First AG Meeting + Open Workshop at Open Knowledge Conference December: Second Open Workshop June: Second Interim Study Report DSI Challenge Prize design Sept. Post-workshop Report Sept. Final Study Report July: Third AG Meeting February: DSI Policy Workshop and second AG Meeting December : First Interim Study Report Inception Report Digitalsocial .eu live Crowdsourcing DSI policy ideas on the Your Priorities platform Oui Share Collaborative Economy Fest 2014: DSI Mapping launch France March: Guardian Article 10 DSI innovators to watch We are here May 2013 August 2014 Jan 2014
  4. 4. ‘a type of social and collaborative innovation in which innovators, users and communities co-create knowledge and solutions for a wide range of social needs and at a scale that was unimaginable before the rise of ICT and the Internet’ What is Digital Social Innovation ?
  5. 5. Why is it so interesting ? • Empowers Citizens • New opportunities for partnerships and coproduction between citizens and services • Creates new opportunities to collaborate on creating solutions that have a social impact • Increases the potential to rapidly scale social innovations • Better public value services • Opportunities to develop and scale decentralized digital ecosystems for the social good
  6. 6. Learning from practice Long shortlist of 100+ examples of organisations working on DSI. Case studied 39 of these
  7. 7. Four technological trends in DSI Open Hardware New ways of making and using open hard-ware solutions and moving towards and Open Source Internet of Things Open Knowledge Co-production of new knowledge and crowd mobilisation based on open content, open source and open access Open Data Innovative ways to capture, use, analyse, and interpret open data coming from people and from the environment Open Networks Innovative combinations of network solutions and infrastructures, e.g. sensor net -works, free interoperable network services, open Wifi, bottom up-broadband, distributed social networks, p2p infrastructure
  8. 8. Open Hardware Arduino Arduino is a simple low cost circuit board that anyone can turn into an electrical device Over 1 million Arduino boards have been produced
  9. 9. Open Networks Safecast Uses open hardware, sensor networks to capture large open radiation level data sets. Used by citizens to map radiation levels in Japan after the Fukushima nuclear disaster. More than 13 Million Data Points have been captured to date.
  10. 10. Open Hardware Smart Citizen Kit Smart Citizen Kit seeks to bring citizens together to address environmental challenges Enables the user to measure environmental data and a Wi-Fi antenna that enables the data to be shared. Installed at scale in Barcelona, Amsterdam and Manchester
  11. 11. Open Knowledge Zooniverse Zooniverse involves large crowds of citizens in capturing and analysing big data sets. Zooniverse hosts online citizen science projects which involve the public in crowdsourcing academic research. Large online communities devote their free time to projects such as studying more than 2m images of cancer cells in the Cellslider project
  12. 12. Gamification – Genes in Space
  13. 13. Open Knowledge Patients Like Me Enables people living with a long-term health condition to contribute their personal experience and knowledge on diseases, condition details and treatments to a social network of peers living with similar conditions. The network engage more than 220,000 users and cover more than 2,000 conditions
  14. 14. Open Networks Guifi.net Founded in 2000 as a response to the lack of internet in rural Catalonia. Operates a "mesh network" where each person in the network helps transmit internet to other nodes in the Guifi net. More than 23,000 network nodes.
  15. 15. Open Data Open Corporates scraping, opening up big data sets Through open data and web scraping Open Corporates make information about companies and the corporate world more transparent and accessible. The data is turned in to searchable maps and visualisations of complex corporate structures. Example – Goldman Sachs has 1,475 subsidiaries registered in the U.S. and 739 in the Caymans alone.
  16. 16. Digitalsocial.eu Engaging the European DSI community and mapping networks
  17. 17. www.digitalsocial.eu Crowdmapping the European DSI community
  18. 18. Organisations working on and supporting DSI across Europe in multiple ways…. Type of support or activity Networking Events, Fairs, and Festivals Running Incubators and accelerators Hosting and managing maker spaces and hacker spaces Through research projects or research networks Delivering digital social services Providing funding and social investment Advocacy and advisory or expert bodies Bethnal Green Ventures Fablab Amsterdam Nominet Trust Chaos Communication Camp W3C Tyze
  19. 19. Lessons Learned.
  20. 20. Lessons learned…. 918 organisations and their projects mapped Most DSI projects are driven by new types of SI organisations. Significant skills gap to do ‘digital’ in the social innovation community Most open data activity least on open hardware and networks Less activity in Eastern EU Most activity is small scale , but rapidly evolving field, with lots of interest & potential & challenges
  21. 21. Supportin DSI to grow
  22. 22. Making it easier to create new digital SI (eg regulatory, funding &c) Making it easier to grow and spread digital SI (eg public procurement, support for evidence generation, common standards) Increasing the potential value of digital SI (eg making available open data, ubiquitous broadband) Enabling some of the radical, disruptive innovations emerging from digital SI – new approaches to money, consumption, education, health > > > > Policy goals
  23. 23. Materials on Digital Social Innovation 11 Digital Social Innovation Trends Keep in touch: www.digitalsocial.eu contact@digitalsocial.eu @Digi_SI

Notes de l'éditeur

  • At it its simplest digital social innovation can be described as using digital technologies to foster collaborations using digital technologies that achieve a social impact.
  • At it its simplest digital social innovation can be described as using digital technologies to foster collaborations using digital technologies that achieve a social impact.
  • often illustrating the layers of control across global organisations (in some cases showing thousands of subsidiaries). One analysis of the complex corporate structure of Goldman Sachs based on data from the US, New Zealand, the Cayman Islands, Luxembourg and the UK, identified 1,475 subsidiaries registered in the US and 739 in the Caymans alone. OpenCorporates has grown to become the largest open database of companies in the world, with data on 60m companies.

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