by Craig Hammer | 11:00 AM March 29, 2013
Open data could be the gamechanger when it comes to eradicating global poverty. In the last two years, central and local governments and multilateral organizations around the world have opened a range of data — information on budgets, infrastructure, health, sanitation, education, and more — online, for free. The data are not perfect, but then perfection is not the goal. Rather, the goal is for this data to become actionable intelligence: a launchpad for investigation, analysis, triangulation, and improved decision making at all levels.
While the "opening" has generated excitement from development experts, donors, several government champions, and the increasingly mighty geek community, the hard reality is that much of the public has been left behind, or tacked on as an afterthought. So how can we support "data-literacy" across the full spectrum of users, including media, NGOs, labor unions, professional associations, religious groups, universities, and the public at large?
Here's one approach. It's
time and resource intensive, but crucial — institutionalizing
data literacy across societies. Stay with me on this. I'm not
suggesting that everyone on planet Earth should be trained in
statistical analysis, visualization and app development. Rather,
let's work more with journalists and civic groups. Knight Fellow Justin
Arenstein calls
these folks "mass mobilizers" of information. O'Reilly Media's Alex
Howard points
to these groups in particular because they can helpdemystify data, to make it understandable by
populations and not just statisticians. Bono calls thisfactivism.
[...]
Continua qui:
http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/03/open_data_has_little_value_if.html