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February 13, 2015

5 Good Reads in Big Open Data: Feb 13 2015

What does it mean for the Open Web if users don't know they're on the internet? Via QUARTZ: “This is more than a matter of semantics. The expectations and behaviors of the next billion people to come online will have profound effects on how the internet evolves. If the majority of the world’s online population spends time on Facebook, then policymakers, businesses, startups, developers, nonprofits, publishers, and anyone else interested in communicating with them will also, if they are to be effective, go to Facebook. That means they, too, must then play by the rules of one company. And that has implications for us all.”
Common Crawl Foundation
Common Crawl Foundation
Common Crawl - Open Source Web Crawling data‍
  1. What does it mean for the Open Web if users don’t know they’re on the internet? – via QUARTZ:
  2. This is more than a matter of semantics. The expectations and behaviors of the next billion people to come online will have profound effects on how the internet evolves. If the majority of the world’s online population spends time on Facebook, then policymakers, businesses, startups, developers, nonprofits, publishers, and anyone else interested in communicating with them will also, if they are to be effective, go to Facebook. That means they, too, must then play by the rules of one company. And that has implications for us all.
  3. Hard Drive Data Sets -via Backblaze: Backblaze provides online backup services storing data on over 41,000 hard drives ranging from 1 terabyte to 6 terabytes in size.  They have released an open, downloadable dataset on the reliability of these drives.
  4. The Open Source Question: critically important web infrastructure is woefully underfunded – via Slate: on the strange dichotomy of Silicon Valley: a “hypercapitalist steamship powered by it’s very antithesis”
  5. February 21st is Open Data Day- via Spatial Source: use this interactive map to find an Open Data event near you (or add your own)
International Open Data Hackathon
Image Source: opendataday.org/map
  1. Security is at the heart of the web – via O’Reilly Radar:
  2. …we want to be able to go to sleep without worrying that all of those great conversations on the open web will endanger the rest of what we do.
  3. Making the web work has always been a balancing act between enabling and forbidding, remembering and forgetting, and public and private. Managing identity, security, and privacy has always been complicated, both because of the challenges in each of those pieces and the tensions among them.
  4. Complicating things further, the web has succeeded in large part because people — myself included — have been willing to lock their paranoias away so long as nothing too terrible happened.
  5. Follow us @CommonCrawl on Twitter for the latest in Big Open Data
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