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DMA — Data Protection 2017

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DMA — Data Protection 2017

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Slides from Data Protection 2017 given by Gavin Starks

"That culture is always left to the end in technology revolutions. Make no mistake, the web of data is a revolution: but it has very little to do with new technology. Learn about the cultural impacts and business models that will help you navigate in a data-driven world."

https://dma.org.uk/event/data-protection-2017

Slides from Data Protection 2017 given by Gavin Starks

"That culture is always left to the end in technology revolutions. Make no mistake, the web of data is a revolution: but it has very little to do with new technology. Learn about the cultural impacts and business models that will help you navigate in a data-driven world."

https://dma.org.uk/event/data-protection-2017

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DMA — Data Protection 2017

  1. 1. Photograph by Richard Olsenius bitrot wikileaks FOO.GOV NSA All your old spreadsheets something.something.secure (shhhhh) because datarot facebook google binary dust
  2. 2. Data is changing the nature of politics, business, design, products and services. This reflects a cultural shift to an open, networked society.
  3. 3. There are more people online today than were alive when I was born
  4. 4. 7B people today…8B by 2025…9B by 2040 3B people online today 5B machines online today 25B machines online by 2020 “Everything is now a computer” — Bruce Schneier
  5. 5. The digital economy uses 10% of global electricity The same amount used to light the entire planet in 1985
  6. 6. Our challenge is to sustain over 7B people 
 while hitting peak ‘everything’ everywhere
  7. 7. “We know we have to adapt — how? Digital engagement driving e-commerce Footfall has moved to online Strategy for constant change? Where is the customer? How do I reach them? How can we innovate? What about intellectual property / security / quality / liability / value / brand? Risk of inaction, or action… We struggle to keep up” Fear Uncertainty Doubt
  8. 8. Incumbent credit: Simon Wardley http://blog.gardeviance.org/
  9. 9. credit: Simon Wardley http://blog.gardeviance.org/
  10. 10. WhatsApp – 60,000,000,000 messages/day (with <100 engineers) Global SMS – 20,000,000,000 messages/day
  11. 11. A square foot of screen sold 
 for every adult on Earth* *in the last 15 years
  12. 12. Linux (1991) 
 100,000 contributors
 10,000,000 servers
 100,000,000 phones
  13. 13. Wikipedia
 30,294,961 registered users
 41,515,145 pages
 139,688 active editors
 5th most popular website
  14. 14. Wordpress 74,652,825 websites (about 25% of the top 10M sites)
  15. 15. Github
 24,377,273 users
 53,000,000+ code repositories
 597 employees
  16. 16. 12,182,155 wallets Emergence of networks that have centralised databases but are not operated by any single entity
  17. 17. Open vs Proprietary ‘Closed’ Security Systems “We predict adopters of closed systems will regret making short-term gains at the expense of long-term pain.” World Security Report 2015-01 http://ow.ly/HGVCW
  18. 18. OpenCorporates
 126,614,925 companies
 10 staff
 
 Kickstarter
 $2,879,839,833 raised
 12,448,917 donors
 119,823 successful projects
 
 p2p lending (UK)
 £6,500,000,000

  19. 19. Gangham style 
 2,769,000,000 views http://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_shapes_who_you_are – 23M views
  20. 20. TransportAPI A data-driven ecosystem that joins cities, large and small businesses, and citizens UK’s open transport platform 1,500 developers Fremium model (data-as-a-service) 80% of UK transport data http://www.transportapi.com
  21. 21. NETWORK THINKING for a data generation
  22. 22. https://www.flickr.com/photos/pkwflickr/6188760566/in/album-72157627764211574/ Open roads underpin our physical economy Open networks underpin our digital economy Open data underpins our knowledge economy
  23. 23. Data is changing the nature of politics, business, design, products and services. This reflects a cultural shift to an open, networked society.

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