SINGAPORE
Private sector
organizations can help drive sustainable city projects by making their
non-personal data open for public use in addition to those provided by
government bodies. However, there needs to be policies set to protect
customers' privacy.
Jason Aspes, founding partner of
sustainability and innovations company Newton Circus, said non-personal, open
data is a "good thing". "It can improve our cities, provide
innovative uses and potential economic opportunities for both our cities and
the citizens who [get to] have access to the data," he added.
For such data, he called for a
system to recognize the value of the information and make it available to
third-party developers and service providers to help improve cities to become
"more efficient and sustainable places to call as home".
Aspes did point out key issues with
using data provided by private sector organizations will be in data and privacy
protection. Thus, there needs to be policies to safeguard the use of such
information, he urged.
Hacking for good
Newton Circus is organizing a series
of events, called UP Singapore to encourage citizens to come together and solve
urban issues. One such activity is the Urban Prototyping hackathon where
participants will make use of public and previously unavailable government and
corporate data to develop solutions to improve the city-state's urban
environment, Aspes revealed during the briefing held here on Tuesday.
Among the organizations opening up
their data repositories for the hackathon are local telco Singapore
Telecommunications (SingTel), contactless payment service provider EZ-Link,
public transport operator SMRT, and public sector agencies such as Ministry of
Health and the Land Transport Authority, he added.
Wong Yu Hsiang, chief operating officer
at SingTel Digital Media, explained that the data provided by the operator will
be "anonymized" and is not personally identifiable. He added that
hackers can make use of its mobile devices data to see how crowds move around.
The hackathon will be held on Jun.
23 and Jun. 24, and shortlisted participants will then go on to showcase their
creation at the 2012 World Cities Summit to be held here from Jul. 1 to Jul. 4.
The winning entry will stand to receive up to S$250,000 (US$193,841) in funding
to turn the prototype into reality.
Asked why the company chose to hold
the event here, Aspes said Singapore is highly wired up and "collects more
data than other cities".
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