Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
WRR: Big Data project Bart van der Sloot
2
Task The Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR) is an independent advisory body for the Dutch government. Its position is governed by the Act Establishing a Scientific Council on Government Policy of 30 June 1976 (Instellingswet WRR). The task of the WRR is to advise the government on issues that are of great importance for society. The reports of the WRR are not tied to one policy sector. Rather, its reports go beyond individual sectors; they are concerned with the direction of government policy for the longer term.
3
Programme Collective arrangements for housing, care and pensions; sustainability and energy; financialisation; societal dividing lines; the Netherlands and the European Unions); accountability in public civil society; freedom and security in the cyber domain. These are a few of the topics that will be investigated by the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR) in the coming period. The WRR Programme contains a summary of the proposed advisory reports and other activities over the coming months. The WRR prepares its Programme after consultation with the Prime Minister. This Programme is the result of extensive consultation with representatives of the worlds of science, policy and practice to determine which topics warrant the attention of the WRR in the period ahead. The WRR Programme is dynamic and leaves scope for a more responsive, flexible approach, which translates into greater scope for giving advice both on request and on its own initiative: quick and concise where possible, detailed and thoroughgoing where necessary.
4
Council The members of the Council Prof.dr. A.W.A. Boot (Arnoud)
Professor of Corporate Finance and Financial Markets Prof.dr.mr. M.A.P. Bovens (Mark) Professor of Public Administration Professor G.B.M. (Godfried) Engbersen Professor of Sociology Professor E.M.H. (Ernst) Hirsch Ballin Professorof Dutch and European Constitutional Law Prof.dr. J.A. Knottnerus (André) Chairman of the Council Prof.dr. M. de Visser (Marianne) Professor of Neuromuscular Diseases Prof.dr. G.H. de Vries (Gerard) Member of the Council Prof.dr.ir. M.P.C. Weijnen (Margot) Professor of Process & Energy Systems Engineering
5
Staff A.M. (Meike) Bokhorst PhD
Medior scientific staff member Housing, care and pensions dr. D.W.J. (Dennis) Broeders Senior scientific staff member / project coördinator Freedom and security in the cyber domain prof.dr. H.O. (Huub) Dijstelbloem Senior scientific staff member/ projectcoördinator Food A. (Albert) Faber, MSc Scientific staff member/project coordinator Policy perspectives for sustainable development dr. P.J.M. (Peter) de Goede Senior scientific staff member Policy perspectives for sustainable development mr. H.M. (Henk) Griffioen Medior scientific staff member/ project coordinator Housing, care and pensions mr.drs. J.R. (Josta) de Hoog Medior scientific staff member Food dr.ir. A.M. (Annemarth) Idenburg Senior scientific staff member / project coördinator Financialisation dr. A.P. (Petra) Jonkers Senior scientific staff member Choice, Behaviour and Policy II drs. A.G. (Anne-Greet) Keizer Medior scientific staff member Culture dr. M. (Monique) Kremer Senior scientific staff member The Future of work prof.dr. C.J. (Cor) van Montfort Visiting fellow Supervision and responsability M. (Marijke) Rem MA MBA Senior scientific staff member Secretary evaluation commity WRR drs. A. (Arthur) van Riel Scientific staff member Financialisation dr. F.S.L. (Steven) Schouten Senior scientific staff member Lessons from Evaluation E.K. (Erik) Schrijvers PhD Senior scientific staff member Culture B.J.P. (Bart) Stellinga MA Medior scientific staff member Financialisation dr. W.L. (Will) Tiemeijer Senior scientific staff member / project coördinator Choice, Behaviour and Policy II dr. R.C.P.M. (Robert) Went Senior scientific staff member The future of work
6
Big Data project Ernst Hirsh Ballin (chair)
Dennis Broeders (coordinator) Josta de Hoog (staff) Bart van der Sloot (IViR) Rosamunde van Brakel (VUB)
7
Request by the government
Big Data, privacy and security Not about intelligence services Four questions: (1) From gathering to use? Purpose limitation Data minimalisation Territoriality (2) Data maning, profiling, predictive analytics Effectiveness Transparancy, individual rights (3) Quantum Computing Encyrption Decryption
8
What are the Big Questions?
What is new with Big Data? Unlimmited data gathering No purpose Statistical correlation (probability) Aggregated data > - personal data – individual rights What is the problem? Current law is outdated or is not enforced Shift in power relations (gov-cit, gov-buis, buis-cit, cit-cit) What is the solution? Better enforcement (fines, technology, policy, etc.) Strenghten the current law Move beyond privacy and look to consumer law, discrimination law, unfair commercial practices Create a new framework for these kinds of problems
9
Time path Book: bundling contrubutions from guest authors
June 2015 Case studies: published on the website Report: advise for the government June 2015?
10
Book 1 Introduction 2 A technological description of the state of the art of big data and analysis of the possible opportunities and dangers that flow from this. 3 4 A historical description of the development of encryption and decryption, the emergence of quantum computing and the value of PETs and other technological safeguarding tools. 5 A Trans-Atlantic comparison between privacy regulation in the US and Europe, which will focus on the collection or use of data, the principle of data minimalisation and purpose limitation. 6 An analysis of the power and control of data and databases, in which an overview will be given how data is being used by which parties and how the control is governed. 7 A discussion on the regulation of predictive profiling, specifically focussing on the presumption of innocence and the prohibition of abuse of power. 8 A discussion of the cooperation between public and private sectors in the political economy of Big Data and commodification of security. 9 A part about enforcement and regulation with a focus on legal and policy instruments and their efficacy regarding Big Data practices. 10 A contribution which discusses the focus on the individual, subjective rights and individual interests in the current legal paradigm and questions whether this is still viable in the age of Big Data. 11 An analysis of the social and ethical consequences of Big Data, which also provides an overview of the most important intentional and unintentional consequences and issues revolving around Big Data. 12 Conclusion
11
Case studies Case studies 1 Intelligence Services 2 Security (police)
3 Fraud 4 Healthcare
12
Final report Report 1 Introduction 3 Big data and human security 4
Rules 5 Type of Regulation 6 Norm adressees 7 Enforcement 8 Conclusion
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.