000 | 01913nam a22002057a 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
020 | _a9781138359574 | ||
082 |
_a330 _bSRE |
||
100 | _aSree Kumar | ||
245 | _aThe data economy : implications from Singapore | ||
260 |
_aNew York _bRoutledge _c2019 |
||
300 |
_ax, 116 p. _b23 cm. |
||
500 | _a "'The data economy' is a term used by many, but properly understood by few. Even more so the concept of 'big data'. Both terms embody the notion of a digital world in which many transactions and data flows animate a virtual space. This is the unseen world in which technology has become the master, with the hand of the human less visible. In fact, however, it is human interaction in and around technology that makes data so pervasive and important - the ability of the human mind to extract, manipulate and shape data that gives meaning to it. This book outlines the findings and conclusions of a multi-disciplinary team of data scientists, lawyers and economists tasked with studying both the possibilities of exploiting the rich datasets made available from many human-technology interactions, and the practical and legal limitations in trying to do so. It revolves around a core case study of Singapore's public transport system, using data both from the private company operating the contactless payment system (EZ-Link) and the government agency responsible for public transport infrastructure (LTA). In analysing both the possibilities and the limitations of these datasets, the authors propose policy recommendations both in-terms of uses for large datasets and the legislation necessary to enable these uses while protecting the privacy of users" | ||
650 | _aData mining -- Economic aspects. | ||
650 | _aData mining -- Economic aspects -- Singapore. | ||
650 | _aBig data -- Economic aspects. | ||
700 | _a Warren B Chik | ||
700 | _aSee-Kiong Ng | ||
700 | _aSin Gee Teo | ||
942 | _cBK | ||
999 |
_c344846 _d344846 |