Showing posts with label ODI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ODI. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 September 2018

The Digital Ape: how to live (in peace) with smart machines by Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson

The Digital Ape: how to live (in peace) with smart machines
by Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson

Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt is well known to DMossEsq's millions of readers as the prophet of the magic of open data. He's the chairman and co-founder of the Open Data Institute and Roger Hampson is one of the ODI's four non-executive directors.

The title "The Digital Ape" is inspired by Desmond Morris's The Naked Ape and extends his evolutionary approach to artificial intelligence. Man has always used tools to overcome his original shortcomings. First there was the hand axe. Now there's artificial intelligence. Messrs Shadbolt and Hampson's argument is that the hand axe didn't destroy the human race, so artificial intelligence won't either.

What can we digital apes look forward to in the brave new artificial intelligence world where we are at peace with our smart machines?

This is a question Professor Sir Nigel has tackled before in conversation with the much lamented journalist, Steve Hewlett:
Just imagine a new world where you look out of the window and see the blue flashing lights, and then someone flies through the door and says "we're here to prevent you from having a heart attack".
Flint hand axe found in Winchester
Nothing as exciting as that in The Digital Ape, where Messrs Shadbolt and Hampson content themselves instead with a relatively dull vision of the fridge automatically ordering butter for you when stocks run low. Also, "the floor will phone social services if Granny has a fall [but will social services answer?]". (This is at Loc 3052 of the Kindle edition of the book which doesn't have page numbers, just Locs/locations.)

Professor Sir Nigel is or at least was in charge of the government's midata programme which he amusingly claimed, five years ago, would allow us to "get to the future more quickly". No sign of that. The apps haven't been developed ...

... and the obvious problems remain unsolved. In a digital ape world where we're permanently under surveillance and all data is open including personal information, Steve Hewlett wanted to know, what happens to privacy? We look to our eminent authors for guidance. In vain:
On the face of it, open data is an idea too simple and right to fail. Assuming that the correct safeguards around private and personal information are in place ... (Loc 3802)
What are the "correct safeguards"? No answer.
Public datasets should definitely be open to all comers, subject to privacy and security concerns ... (Loc 3919)
How "definitely"? What is a "public dataset"? Which datasets would be "subject to privacy and security concerns"? What access if any would there be to these concerning datasets? No answers.
The digital ape needs urgently to debate and define the reasonable boundaries for the collection and analysis of information by government agencies in the age of terror. Restraints and accountability are essential ... (Loc 4023)
Surely this book is the place for that debate. This is the debate that the leaders of the Open Data Institute should be ideally placed to contribute to. What "restraints and accountability"? No answer.
... we badly need conventions that curb the continued weaponisation of the digital realm ... (Loc 4032)
What "conventions"? No answer.
There is no contradiction between the desire to live in a society that is open and secure, and the desire to protect privacy. Open and private apply to different content, handled in appropriately different ways ... (Loc 4069)
What "appropriately different ways"? No answer.
The personal data model is one way to produce a viable alternative [to the Orwellian implications of building one huge public database]. There are obviously problems ... We are certain these are solvable problems ... (Loc 4081)
Why are the authors "certain"? Their certainty doesn't make the reader certain. What are the solutions? No answer.
If we want people to pay the tax they owe, we need some system of collecting it [we already have one, courtesy HMRC, quite an extensive one], and some way of knowing collectively that we have done so. Imagination will be needed to turn all these into data stores held by individuals ... (Loc 4139)
"Some system"? What system? "Some way"? What way? "Imagination" is no answer.
There need to be clear rules for the transparency of algorithmic decision-making, the principles and procedures on which choices about the lives of individuals and groups are being made ... (Loc 4512)
What "clear rules"? What "principles and procedures"? No answers.
We need a new framework to govern the innovations, which might enable individuals, en masse, to temper the continued concentration of ownership and power ... (Loc 4582)
What "new framework"? No answer.

All these questions. We all knew them. That's why we bought the book. To benefit from the experts' ideas. But no. No answers.

So much for "on the face of it, open data is an idea too simple and right to fail ... (Loc 3802)". Nothing "simple" about it. Nothing obviously "right" about it.

How to live (in peace) with smart machines? No idea. Not a clue.

The Digital Ape: how to live (in peace) with smart machines by Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson

The Digital Ape: how to live (in peace) with smart machines
by Nigel Shadbolt and Roger Hampson

Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt is well known to DMossEsq's millions of readers as the prophet of the magic of open data. He's the chairman and co-founder of the Open Data Institute and Roger Hampson is one of the ODI's four non-executive directors.

The title "The Digital Ape" is inspired by Desmond Morris's The Naked Ape and extends his evolutionary approach to artificial intelligence. Man has always used tools to overcome his original shortcomings. First there was the hand axe. Now there's artificial intelligence. Messrs Shadbolt and Hampson's argument is that the hand axe didn't destroy the human race, so artificial intelligence won't either.

What can we digital apes look forward to in the brave new artificial intelligence world where we are at peace with our smart machines?

This is a question Professor Sir Nigel has tackled before in conversation with the much lamented journalist, Steve Hewlett:
Just imagine a new world where you look out of the window and see the blue flashing lights, and then someone flies through the door and says "we're here to prevent you from having a heart attack".

Friday, 29 August 2014

The magic of open data #1

"Sharing information across government databases
will dramatically increase governmental powers –
otherwise the UK government wouldn't have proposed it."
Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt, Chairman, Open Data Institute


Lough Erne in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, "is a particularly scenic waterway, renowned for its beautiful setting. The area is popular for angling and watersports, with waterskiing, Rowing and wakeboarding being amongst the most popular; the stretch of water alongside the Broadmeadow, Enniskillen, has hosted stages of the World Waterski Championships annually since 2005, and in 2007, a pro-wakeboard competition, 'Wakejam' was hosted by the Erne Wakeboard Club (EWC) after successful national wakeboard competitions in the previous years. Canoeing is also a popular recreational sport on the Erne".

That's what it says in Wikipedia and that's where, on 18 June 2013, after a hard day's fishing and wakeboarding, the G8 canoed back to shore and issued their famous Declaration (para.7):
We, the G8, agree that open data are an untapped resource with huge potential to encourage the building of stronger, more interconnected societies that better meet the needs of our citizens and allow innovation and prosperity to flourish.
It is this Declaration that caused David Gauke MP, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, blithely to recommend standing the British Constitution on its head so that whereas we used to imagine that personal data submitted to the government would by default be treated as confidential, in future it will instead be treated as open, public and available to all:
... the UK helped secure the G8’s Open Data Charter, which presumes that the data held by Governments will be publicly available unless there is good reason to withhold it. (p.4)
Queen Méabh (Maev)
by Joseph Christian Leyendecker
Is it something in the water? "In Irish mythology and folklore, there are three tales about how the lake was formed and got its name. One says that it is named after a mythical woman named Erne, Queen Méabh's lady-in-waiting at Cruachan. Erne and her maidens were frightened away from Cruachan when a fearsome giant emerged from the cave of Oweynagat. They fled northward and drowned in a river or lake, their bodies dissolving to become Lough Erne ...".

It may not have been a fearsome giant that emerged from the cave of Oweynagat, of course. It may actually have been Rt Hon Francis Maude MP, Cabinet Office Minister, "JFDI", as he's known, who frightened poor Erne and her maidens to death. Whitehall folklore has it that he once told the Information Commissioner's Conference:
I want to bust the myths around the complexities of data sharing ... we aim to find effective ways of using and sharing data for the good of everyone ...
And it may not have been water that they were drinking when the G8 were "helped" – to use Mr Gauke's word – to agree to this inversion of the settled order (para.11-13):
Principle 1: Open Data by Default

We recognise that free access to, and subsequent re-use of, open data are of significant value to society and the economy.

We agree to orient our governments towards open data by default.

We recognise that the term government data is meant in the widest sense possible. This could apply to data owned by national, federal, local, or international government bodies, or by the wider public sector ...
The UK held the Presidency at the time and within limits they could launder their own policy through the G8 but what on earth possessed them to dream up open data by default?

Mr Gauke tries to blame Shakespeare:
Getting to this stage:
The Government published its response to the Shakespeare Review of Public Sector Information on 14 June 2013 ... (p.2)
That's Stephan, by the way, not William.

Stephan Shakespeare is the CEO of YouGov, the polling organisation, and he wrote An Independent Review of Public Sector Information [PSI].

We need to familiarise ourselves at this point with some of the lyrical vocabulary of our ancient and magical land. Here in the UK, Ordnance Survey, the Met Office, the Land Registry and Companies House are the four Trading Funds that together constitute the Public Data Group (PDG). The PDG brings in £143 million a year in revenue for the Exchequer by selling maps and weather forecasts and such like.

And Mr Shakespeare thinks that that's ridiculous. He wants to break the antique spell we live under in the UK and drag the country into the information age by giving away PSI for free to entrepreneurs. The eruption of innovation that results will expand the economy. That's the idea, at least:
It seems a straightforward decision to invest £143m to make Trading Fund data widely available is a relatively small price to pay to leverage wider economic benefits far exceeding this by orders of magnitude. (p.30)
But just when you think you've found a convincing prophet, he goes and spoils it by saying that:
Forecasting future benefits is also hard to predict. How businesses and individuals might use datasets in the future to generate new products and services and by implication impact economic growth, is equally unknown. (p.30)
In other words there isn't the slightest justification he can advance for saying that the unspecified wider economic benefits of giving away this PSI for free would exceed £143 million by uncounted orders of magnitude.

It can't be Shakespeare under whose influence the wetland sprites (Maude and Gauke?) were acting at Lough Erne. Who then?

Perhaps Tim Kelsey.

Mr Kelsey was for a while the Executive Director of Transparency and Open Data in Mr Maude's fiefdom, the Cabinet Office. A magnificent job title, and a doughty champion of open data he is and has been for years – this, for example, is a pronouncement he made in an article published in July 2009, Long live the database state:
If the next government, of whichever party, wants a better public sector it must encourage more use of personal data; not less. What should be done? Data sharing must be made easier, first by removing the legislative obstacles to sharing government databases.

... no one who uses a public service should be allowed to opt out of sharing their records ...

Nor can people rely on their record being anonymised ...
Unfortunately for Mr Kelsey, his so-called "care.data" plan to collect all our previously confidential medical records and give them away to researchers fell apart in February 2014 when patients and doctors lost confidence in him. It can't have been him casting the open data spells four months later at Lough Erne and intoxicating the G8.

Which suggests that the guiding light may have been the charming Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt, chairman and co-founder of the Open Data Institute, and the author of The spy in the coffee machine – the end of privacy as we know it (2008):

... sharing information across government databases will dramatically increase governmental powers – otherwise the UK government wouldn't have proposed it. (p.95)

... we should never forget that bureaucracies are information-thirsty, and will never stop consuming. Indeed, they will never even cut down. They will break or bend their own rules, and any prior specification of how information use will be limited, or data not shared, is not worth the paper it is printed on. (p.212)
Actually, he isn't the author, he's the co-author of that book, with Kieron O'Hara, his sometime PhD student. And Dr O'Hara is the sole author of Transparent Government, Not Transparent Citizens: A Report on Privacy and Transparency for the Cabinet Office, a work referred to by Stephan Shakespeare in his PSI report (p.34). And Professor Sir Nigel appeared in front of the Public Administration Select Committee (PASC) to give evidence jointly with Stephan Shakespeare. And Tim Kelsey and Professor Sir Nigel are or were both members of the Data Strategy Board and, as such, assisted with the production of Stephan Shakespeare's PSI report (p.4). And so it goes cabalistically on.

When Professor Sir Nigel and Stephan Shakespeare appeared in front of PASC they were bemoaning the fact that the Post Office Royal Mail had just been privatised and had taken the PAF with them onto their balance sheet. The PAF is the Postcode Address File and would have been given away to entrepreneurs for free if our two witnesses had had their way.

The Hon Bernard Jenkin MP, chairman of PASC, agreed.

Somewhat surprisingly.

After all, Professor Sir Nigel and Stephan Shakespeare gave no indication whatever how giving away the PAF for nothing would have made the economy grow.

And the PAF generates income. Naturally the government wanted to realise the best price possible for the Post Office Royal Mail. That's the coffee in the coffee machine you can smell. Wake up.

They've had more luck with Companies House:
Free Companies House data to boost UK economy

Companies House is to make all of its digital data available free of charge. This will make the UK the first country to establish a truly open register of business information ...

This is a considerable step forward in improving corporate transparency; a key strand of the G8 declaration at the Lough Erne summit in 2013.

It will also open up opportunities for entrepreneurs to come up with innovative ways of using the information ...
The "digital data available" from Companies House includes the title, name, address, date of birth, nationality and profession of every director and every company secretary of every company in the UK – "the end of privacy as we know it".

Do they imagine that thousands of very bright people haven't been thinking of "innovative ways of using the information" for several decades now? What are they supposed to have missed? Companies House don't say. Just like Stephan Shalespeare, who couldn't tell us how many orders of magnitude his leveraged wider economic benefits would exceed the PDG income by.

There's one obvious application of the Companies House data. Suppose you're a 50 year-old female Hungarian surveyor living in Kent and suppose that you want to establish a false identity for some entrepreneurial purpose. Not so easy in the past but now, with the Companies House data available to you for free, you can search for suitable matches in the comfort of your own home. Thank you Messrs Maude, Gauke, Jenkin, Shadbolt, O'Hara, Shakespeare and Kelsey – the answer to Queen Méabh's prayer.

Apart from that, there's no telling what sort of innovation these people are talking about. It just looks like hope. Or guesswork. Will giving away an entire country's personal data inspire innovation? How? Why? Are there any examples? If it's that easy to create innovation, are the universities wasting their time doing research? Are we wasting our money funding it? Why bother granting corporate tax relief on R&D? Is there no downside? Can nothing go wrong? Which economy will benefit? Suppose the innovators are all Estonian – how does that help the UK economy?

You may not be able to answer those questions and all the other related questions that occur to you. We know that Tim Kelsey can't. Neither can Stephan Shakespeare – he just says that anyone standing in the way of open data wants people to die of cancer and wants children to be unhappy. Shroud-waving. Blackmail.

But Professor Sir Nigel is a different kettle of fish. Very different. Can he answer the questions? Can he move the debate on from the enchanted world of Lough Erne, out of the twilight and into the open?

That is the subject of a future post which if it is ever written will be based on this talk he gave:


Prof. Sir Nigel Shadbolt - The Fifth Paradigm: From Open Data to Social Machines

----------

Updated 26.3.15

God but Tuesday was an odd day.

Tuesday 24 March 2015, out of the blue, inattendu by any of us proles, came the surprising announcement that Public Servant of the Year ex-Guardian man Mike Bracken CBE CDO had been appointed the UK government's Chief Data Officer thereby making him Public Servant of the Year ex-Guardian man Mike Bracken CBE CDO CDO given that he was already the Chief Digital Officer.

Not that that need concern normal people.

But Twitter went wild, as hundreds of breathless congratulations poured in from all over the world the second best one being:


It's a good question. Along with how do you fit it in with being executive director of the Government Digital Service and senior responsible owner of the pan-government identity assurance programme, GOV.UK Verify (RIP)?

The best tweet was:


Rarely can 94 characters have been freighted with quite so much meaning.


Updated 8.10.15

Tim Kelsey's care.data was meant to start operations 18 months ago in April 2014. That's when, for the first time, the medical records maintained by our GPs (general practitioners/family doctors/the primary care providers) were supposed to be collected centrally by NHS England. There was vociferous opposition from patients and GPs centred on the absence of any thought in care.data about the confidentiality of medical records. NHS England postponed the start by about six months to the autumn of 2014, NHS England acts in response to concerns about information sharing – statement from Tim Kelsey, National Director for Patients and Information.

In October 2014 we learned that there wouldn't be a national roll-out, just a regional pilot, "GP-led clinical commissioning groups in four areas of the country are to help develop the care.data programme as it moves into a ‘pathfinder stage’ ...".

And when would this pilot start?

Clearly not in autumn 2014. In December 2014, the Independent Information Governance Oversight Panel said that the care.data pilot could start just as soon as 27 currently outstanding questions were satisfactorily answered and seven tests were passed.

In written evidence to the Health Committee dated 9 February 2015, the chairman of the Health & Social Care Information Centre revealed that over 700,000 people had opted out of care.data and that "the HSCIC does not currently have the resources or processes to handle such a significant level of objections".

In March 2015 Tim Kelsey told us care.data on hold until election.

By June 2015, after the election, you could take your pick. Either those 700,000 people could opt out of care.data but they could forget about receiving any healthcare. Or their opt-outs would be ignored and their data would be sold to insurance companies anyway. Will Jeremy Hunt ensure that “700,000” patient opt-outs are respected?, medCondifential wanted to know, while the Telegraph newspaper warned us that Nearly 1million patients could be having confidential data shared against their wishes.

And now?
Tim Kelsey to leave NHS England

17 September 2015 - 12:00

He has been appointed commercial director at Telstra Health, a division of Australia’s leading telecommunications provider where he will lead development of new digital and mobile solutions for patients, professionals and citizens around the world ...

Updated 3.11.15

There's something odd about a tweet of Nigel Shadbolt's today.

We know that he and Stephan Shakespeare were hacked off at the Post Office Royal Mail keeping control of the Postcode Address File (PAF) when it was privatised.

Maybe so, but that's the law, the PAF was and is the Post Office Royal Mail's intellectual property (IP) and, if there's some value to be derived from it, it would have been remiss of the management to give it up.

Entrepreneurs can still access the PAF, it's not lost to them. They just have to pay for the privilege.

Did the UK economy lose anything thereby? There is this assumption in some versions of the case for open data that free access to data causes innovation and/or that paid access inhibits innovation.

It is questionable whether that assumption is true. There has not yet been an explosion of innovation caused by Companies House's data becoming freely available. The considerable innovations of DueDil, on the other hand, all took place while the data had to be paid for.

Which makes Sir Nigel's use of the word "contaminated" sound more like something coming out of the mouth of a fundamentalist zealot than the urbane academic we are used to.

Flicking through your copy of Volume 38 of the Journal of Contemporary Asia, you will have come across this on p.546 ...
While the bourgeoisie was relatively small, its representative ideology none the less penetrated other classes. Members of the proletariat could be corrupted by modes of thinking characteristic of the bourgeoisie and take up the "stand" of this class (Mao, 1974a: 73; The Polemic, 1965: 33, 421-2). The proletariat was therefore compelled to wage an ideological struggle to divest members of its own class of bourgeois contamination, and to remould the thought patterns of the bourgeoisie (Ch'en, 1970: 107, 117, 123; Mao, 1977b: 409-10, 504).
... and you may agree that we can do without any recurrence of Maoist "ideological struggle", otherwise the speech given today by the eminently bourgeois Matt Hancock, Cabinet Office Minister, on the topic of data-driven government takes on a sinister, minatory hue.

Mr Hancock has established a "Steering Group of digital and data visionaries" who will drive the agenda on data-sharing and data-driven policy-making. That Steering Group includes Sir Nigel, among others. Here's hoping that none of these stoutly proletarian visionaries becomes contaminated.


Updated St Patrick's Day 2016

The G8 fell for it, see above, or at least pretended to fall for it:
We, the G8, agree that open data are an untapped resource with huge potential to encourage the building of stronger, more interconnected societies that better meet the needs of our citizens and allow innovation and prosperity to flourish.
That was back in June 2013.

Matt Hancock, Cabinet Office Minister, fell for it, or so he said, when he launched the current consultation on data-sharing:
There is huge potential for improving citizens’ lives through data sharing in the UK. The consultation we launch today will help make sure we get data right and bolster security whilst making people’s lives better.
The Chancellor fell in with falling for it in yesterday's Budget:
1.251 This Budget sets out steps to ensure the benefits of digital technology are felt by all businesses and individuals. The government will ... provide up to £5 million to develop options for an authoritative address register that is open and freely available – making wider use of more precise address data and ensuring it is frequently updated will unlock opportunities for innovation ...
The Government Digital Service plan to declare the new national identity assurance scheme to be live in a few weeks time. It's nothing but a machine for collecting your personal information and sharing it widely in the UK and abroad, out of your control.

The pretence that these initiatives are intended to expand the economy is just that, a pretence. Opening up data to all and sundry does not cause innovation.

The G8 Declaration is quire clear. The intention is to invert the Constitution (p.4) ...

... the UK helped secure the G8’s Open Data Charter, which presumes that the data held by Governments will be publicly available unless there is good reason to withhold it.

... all in the name of the bone-headed plan to compile the registers which, together, will constitute a "single source of truth" for Government as a Platform.


Updated 22.3.16

The information-sharing paradox

The G8, we were saying on St Patrick's Day, and the Cabinet Office and the Treasury all want to make more data open. Once it is available to all at no cost, innovation will be the inevitable result and the economy will expand by orders of magnitude, according to Stephan Shakespeare of YouGov, although he can't explain how – where there should be a coherent argument, there's just a hole.

It's not just the G8, the Cabinet Office and the Treasury. Companies House have fallen for it, too. And now they're having to confront the obvious problem, Our register: advice on protecting your personal information. (Don't get your hopes up. Their advice is useless.)

And it's not just the UK. The sensible Australians have got the bug. In the name of their "National Innovation and Science Agenda", Oz government wants much more personal data sharing, hat tip Kat Hall.

This is a global epidemic. With no solution. Because how do you combat a global epidemic? With massive information-sharing ...


Updated five days after St George's Day 2016

As noted on St Patrick's Day, please see above, there is a national log-rolling exercise being conducted in respect of open data. That exercise was assisted yesterday with the publication by Sir Jeremy Heywood, the Cabinet Secretary, of Open data - the revolution is here.

"Open data is data that anyone can access, use or share ... It really has changed people's lives for the better: the value is well proven", says Sir Jeremy.

"The value is well proven"? Follow Sir Jeremy's link and you will find reference to a PwC report, research from Lateral Economics, a McKinsey estimate, a CapGemini study, a Transport for London claim, the results of some Open Data Institute research and the findings of the Landsat Advisory Group that the 42 year-old Landsat mission has not been a waste of public money.

The value of open data remains well questionable. When Sir Jeremy follows up with "I believe the Civil Service can play a central role in harnessing these benefits", the question arises what benefits?

It gets worse. "At both national and local level, government holds huge amounts of data and more is generated every day. People rightly expect us to protect their personal data. But with general and anonymised data we can now achieve things that would have been considered impossible only a decade ago" – what impossible things can Sir Jeremy do now?


"The Government has already published over 27,000 datasets, covering almost £200 billion of public spending, since launching data.gov.uk in 2010. We have done this to be open and transparent about the information we hold ...". OK so far, Sir Jeremy's data.gov.uk is a Good Thing, to the extent that it helps the public to hold the government to account ...

... but then we get "but also so that others, inside and outside of government, can take that data and use it to build new and exciting products and services". What exciting products and services? Sir Jeremy's Companies House, for example, has opened up the personal information of hundreds of thousands of company directors (none of it anonymised by the way) and there's not a single exciting product or service to be seen as a result.

It is only prudent to be well sceptical about Sir Jeremy's assumption that open data inspires innovation and causes the economy to expand and improves people's lives.

Also about his claim that personal information will be treated with respect by his Government Digital Service (GDS), the bizarrely-chosen seat of his Government Data Programme, "... we are aiming to transform the way government stores, manages and uses data. The data team at Government Digital Service is ...".

The Privacy and Consumer Advisory Group have devised a set of nine principles for identity assurance. While claiming to abide by all nine, GDS have flouted the lot with their GOV.UK Verify (RIP) identity assurance scheme which is due to go live tomorrow. Sir Jeremy's revolution is here, indeed.


Updated 1.5.16 1

There was a documentary about the Queen on telly the other day. The programme covered the abdication of the disgraceful wrong 'un Edward VIII and the accession of George VI. There is evidence that, on the King's untimely death, Lord Mountbatten sought to bring back the wrong 'un and have him re-enthroned. At which point in the programme one transcendently magnificent lady, a cousin of the Queen's, delivered herself of the following: "it was always said of Lord Louis that if he swallowed a nail he would shit a corkscrew".

Let's call that property mountBatten(). It's a relation between any number of nails of any sort and any number of corkscrews of any sort. It's obviously not a very pleasant property. But in politics it can be occasionally necessary, all hewn of crooked timber as we most unfortunately are, it has its place.

Not least, we expect our cabinet secretaries to possess it. They must have thousands of other properties as well but it must be the case that cabinectSecretary.mountBatten(). Otherwise they can't do the job and they're no use to us.

When Sir Jeremy Heywood sort of promises that we can all enjoy the imprecise benefits of open data while nevertheless retaining our anonymity, as he did the other day, as noted above, it must be clear to everyone that this is more at the corkscrew end of the body politic's digestive tract than the nail end.

You can forget anonymity if the open data initiative that we are promised for this month, May 2016, proceeds. Professor Ross Anderson says so. So does Professor Martyn Thomas. Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt looks as though he may agree.

They're just professors, of course, what do they know, you may ask. But it's not just them. GDS also have warned about the risk posed to anonymity by open data:
Update, 29 March 2016: We are now able to publish a CSV file (663 kb) containing the data used for the web tool for 7 of the 9 demographic variables provided by the ONS omnibus survey. This is combined with our model's estimate of the individual's probability of being verified by certified companies over time. This is the maximum number of variables we could make public, whilst preserving the anonymity of respondents.

Updated 1.5.16 2

The Electoral Commission once engaged the Government Digital Service (GDS) to do some data-mining work. It didn't go well. It was a painful experience. It ended in failure. The Commission's July 2013 report on the exercise includes:
• There were considerable delays to the original timetable for establishing this pilot. A significant cause of the delays was the lack of capacity and resources within Cabinet Office (and the Government Digital Service (GDS), which is part of Cabinet Office) due to their workload related to the transition to IER ...

• For the national data mining, Cabinet Office’s original intention was that pilot areas should adopt a fairly standardised approach to checking the data received and contacting the individuals identified, to ensure that results were comparable. In practice, however, the nature and extent of follow up work varied widely.

• Much of this variation was caused by practical difficulties, for example the need to spend more time than expected in ensuring the accuracy of the data received. However, some of the variation could have been avoided if there had been fewer delays and a greater level of support provided by Cabinet Office to pilot areas. In particular, a few areas told us they felt unsupported and were unclear about what to do ...

• It is not possible to produce an overall figure for the cost of this pilot. This is because we do not have final costs for all pilot areas or any costs for Cabinet Office (including GDS), who conducted much of the work.

• We are also therefore unable to estimate the cost per new elector registered or the likely cost of any national rollout. Any estimates of these would need to include the cost of coordinating and managing the pilot (the role taken by Cabinet Office in this pilot), as any future work with data mining would require some form of central coordination ...

• The reasons that so many existing electors and ineligible individuals were returned on the data include poor data specifications from Cabinet Office ...

• Inconsistent address formatting and incomplete addresses are likely to have contributed to the significant numbers of existing electors returned in the data (Cabinet Office could not provide the data which would have allowed for a definitive assessment) ...

• In order to answer this question [Is data mining a cost effective way of registering new electors?], we would need to assess the cost benefit of data mining by, for example, calculating the cost per new elector registered. However, we are unable to do this as Cabinet Office could not provide details of their expenditure on the pilot. As they managed the process and conducted much of the matching and data processing, their costs could be significant and are crucial in reaching any realistic assessment of cost effectiveness ...

– The addresses appeared to be more complete than those held in other national databases but a poor data specification from Cabinet Office meant that the format was inconsistent ...

The findings from this pilot do not justify the national roll out of data mining ...

In addition, there were numerous issues in this pilot with the communication and support provided by Cabinet Office ...

Cabinet Office need to ensure that they maintain good communication between themselves, the data holding organisations and EROs [electoral registration officers] throughout the process, including after data from the national databases has been returned to EROs ...
It's a long time ago, of course, well before yesterday, but there is no evidence of GDS making any more successful trips into the world of data science.

Later that year, on 16 October 2013, Mike Bracken, who was chief executive of GDS at the time, gave a speech to the Code For America Summit. "The Efficiency and Reform Group have saved about £10 billion of Whitehall costs", he told delegates, and "this figure represents about 4% of the UK's gross domestic product".

No. £10 billion was about 0.6% of GDP at the time, not 4%. That sort of a mistake must bring tears to the eyes of the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Mr Bracken nevertheless became the government's chief data officer in March 2015.

He left GDS last September, 2015. It's not obvious that GDS have since developed any greater respect for numbers. They say that their forlorn identity management scheme, GOV.UK Verify (RIP), can only go live if the account creation success rate reaches a minimum of 90%. It's currently 70%. GDS want GOV.UK Verify (RIP) to go live anyway.

"In May we will be publishing the latest instalment of our next National Action Plan as part of the Open Government Partnership". That's what the Cabinet Secretary said the other day.

The ONS are in on that plan. So are the ODI, the Open Data Institute. And data.gov.uk ...

... and GDS. How did they get in there? Their inclusion can't be based on their record. It's not exactly an example of data science in action, is it.

The magic of open data #1

"Sharing information across government databases
will dramatically increase governmental powers –
otherwise the UK government wouldn't have proposed it."
Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt, Chairman, Open Data Institute


Lough Erne in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, "is a particularly scenic waterway, renowned for its beautiful setting. The area is popular for angling and watersports, with waterskiing, Rowing and wakeboarding being amongst the most popular; the stretch of water alongside the Broadmeadow, Enniskillen, has hosted stages of the World Waterski Championships annually since 2005, and in 2007, a pro-wakeboard competition, 'Wakejam' was hosted by the Erne Wakeboard Club (EWC) after successful national wakeboard competitions in the previous years. Canoeing is also a popular recreational sport on the Erne".

That's what it says in Wikipedia and that's where, on 18 June 2013, after a hard day's fishing and wakeboarding, the G8 canoed back to shore and issued their famous Declaration (para.7):
We, the G8, agree that open data are an untapped resource with huge potential to encourage the building of stronger, more interconnected societies that better meet the needs of our citizens and allow innovation and prosperity to flourish.

Saturday, 13 July 2013

Economics made simple

The Department for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS) belatedly issued a press release about the midata Innovation Lab which includes this:
Consumer Affairs Minister Jo Swinson said:

"Today’s most successful businesses are the ones that are creative about building customer relationships. The new ’midata’ Lab is an exciting opportunity to put this to the test and explore how businesses could help customers use the data around their spending habits to make better choices.

"There is a lot to be gained from being open and using the information gathered on customers with their knowledge. Developing new and innovative ways to see data also helps improve customer service which will in turn promote growth. I would encourage businesses and developers alike to take advantage of this opportunity and establish themselves as a market leader in the digital market."
Is that true? Do you have a "customer relationship" with Unilever? If not, it doesn't seem to have stopped Unilever from becoming a pretty successful business. What is Ms Swinson talking about? What does she know about economics? Very possibly, nothing, but it doesn't stop her claiming that midata will "promote growth". Utterly unconvincing, where does this idea come from?

Does it come, perhaps, from Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt's Open Data Institute (ODI)? He's in charge at the ODI and he's in charge of midata and he says::
The Open Data Institute is catalysing the evolution of open data culture to create economic, environmental, and social value. It helps unlock supply, generates demand, creates and disseminates knowledge to address local and global issues.
Where did the ODI get this idea from? Was it, perhaps, from the Shakespeare Review?

Famously, Stephan Shakespeare – the founder of YouGov, the political polling organisation, the man who is devising a national data strategy for the UK – believes simultaneously that (a) you can't tell how much it will cost to open up Public Sector Information (PSI) and (b) the return will be "orders of magnitude" higher than the cost. But where did he get the idea?

Was it, perhaps, from the European Commission? Yes, them again:
Europe's New PSI Directive

... The expected effect of this new set of guidelines is also to generate income, as PSI data is raw ore to developers' — public or private —gold. Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the European Commission and head of the Digital Agenda, highlighted the potential economic value of going open with PSI: "Opening up public data means opening up commercial opportunities, creating jobs and building communities." She heralds it as a necessary transformation of European public and private culture.

Despite the welcome perspective of promoting transparency and racking up to €140bn in business and employment, critics quibble that the new directive could have gone further ...
Probably. Possibly. Who knows where these Economics for Dummies ideas come from? They're memes. It's all something to do with the hive brain. That's what the artificial intelligence people would have us believe. Neural networks can demonstrate that we bees can take concerted action, but never how we manage it.

So many experts in economics, they pop up everywhere, like mushrooms, but can you be sure that opening up PSI will help the economy to grow by €140 billion? No. You know that.

All you can be sure of is that your personal data will be harvested along with the public data, as the midata Innovation Lab have confirmed (your public education, health and travel data will all be added to your passport number and National Insurance number and bank account details), and that you will be required to store your data in a personal data store (midata), which "identity providers" will then use to confirm your identity whenever you interact with the government to access public services (IDAP/the identity assurance programme).

And don't forget – it's now illegal in the UK not to register on-line to vote.

The economic result of all the proposed data-sharing is unknown. The only thing that's certain is that you will be enrolled in a national or possibly even a pan-European identity management system.

World-class economics expert though she may be, that's what Jo Swinson's really talking about. Even if her officials haven't told her.

Economics made simple

The Department for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS) belatedly issued a press release about the midata Innovation Lab which includes this:
Consumer Affairs Minister Jo Swinson said:

"Today’s most successful businesses are the ones that are creative about building customer relationships. The new ’midata’ Lab is an exciting opportunity to put this to the test and explore how businesses could help customers use the data around their spending habits to make better choices.

"There is a lot to be gained from being open and using the information gathered on customers with their knowledge. Developing new and innovative ways to see data also helps improve customer service which will in turn promote growth. I would encourage businesses and developers alike to take advantage of this opportunity and establish themselves as a market leader in the digital market."
Is that true? Do you have a "customer relationship" with Unilever? If not, it doesn't seem to have stopped Unilever from becoming a pretty successful business. What is Ms Swinson talking about? What does she know about economics? Very possibly, nothing, but it doesn't stop her claiming that midata will "promote growth". Utterly unconvincing, where does this idea come from?

Monday, 8 July 2013

midata and the BBC. The BBC?

from Craig Belsham's midata blog:
Hi I’m Dan, Director of the midata Innovation Lab, part of the midata voluntary programme ... we will help empower UK consumers in a really meaningful way ...
The BBC are not paid to talk twaddle with a lot of armchair economists.
They are wasting our money,
they shouldn't have joined in the first place
and they should resign from mIL now.

Following last week's exciting launch of the midata Innovation Lab (mIL), now that the party's over, let's take a look at the structure of the organisation. It's a partnership apparently, "a collaboration of the following 22 Founding Partners, respected organisations collaborating with real data to work out how the UK both empowers and protects consumers whilst innovating with data":


Back in November 2011, the Department for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS) issued a press release saying:
Businesses and organisations that have so far committed to working in partnership with Government to achieve the midata vision are:
- Avoco Secure
- billmonitor
- British Gas
- Callcredit
- EDF Energy
- E.ON
- Garlik
- Google
- Lloyds Banking Group
- MasterCard
- Moneysupermarket.com
- Mydex
- npower
- RBS
- Scottish Power
- Scottish Southern Energy
- The UK Cards Association
- Three
- Visa
That's 19 businesses from Avoco Secure to Visa, of whom only three remain "committed to working in partnership with Government to achieve the midata vision". Why have the other 16 dropped out?

The press release also said:
The following consumer groups and regulators are working with midata to represent consumers' interests and concerns. As well as working towards potential benefits, their input plays an important role in identifying potential risks and helping determine how these can be addressed:
- Citizens Advice
- Communications Consumer Panel
- Consumer Focus
- Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)
- OFCOM
- Office of Fair Trading (OFT)
- Which?
That's seven consumer groups/regulators, of whom only two are left. Why have the other five pulled out?

And why are there still 22 Founding Partners left?

What, for example, is the University of Southampton doing on the list?

Their expertise is in oceanography. Nothing to do with midata.

The answer is all to do with the Open Data Institute (ODI), who are also on the list of Founding Partners. The ODI is headed by Professor Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Professor Sir Nigel Shadbolt. They are both professors at Southampton and presumably the university has come along for the ride.

But they shouldn't be there. The ODI is all about open data. Public data. The opposite of what midata is meant to be about, which is personal data. Private data. The two should not be confused. Nigel Shadbolt himself says so:



But there they are, the ODI and Southampton and, what's more, Professor Shadbolt is chairman of the midata programme as well as chairman of the ODI. This is a mess.

The inclusion of O2, Telefonica and Verizon among the founding partners makes a bit of midata sense. The idea behind midata is that consumers should be able to get better value from their phone contracts. Ofcom have failed to ensure good value for money. Having O2, Telefonica and Verizon involved will help to make sure that midata fails as well.

The link between midata and the Government Digital Service's failed Identity Assurance Programme (IDAP) isn't always obvious to other people but readers of this blog will remember that Verizon is one of the UK's eight appointed "identity providers".
from Craig Belsham's midata blog:
My name is Stephen and I head up the work on consumer confidence and trust which is part of the midata voluntary programme ... A data-enabled online market place will create new services that will take your data and do some really interesting things with it ...
They will also remember that, thanks to Edward Snowden, we now know that Verizon hands over its data to the US National Security Agency (NSA), who may or may not share it with the UK's GCHQ. Your personal data may travel via midata even further than Southampton.

The idea behind midata is (also) that consumers should get better value for money from their gas and electricity contracts. It is precisely because Ofgem have failed on that score (along with the Prime Minister) that BIS assert that midata is needed. Having Ofgem and npower on board – as oceanographers say – will ensure that midata fails as well.

midata is meant to help consumers to get better value for money from their current accounts and their debit/credit cards. That's a job MoneySupermarket.com already work at and have done for years which, in turn, is another reason why midata is unnecessary.
from Craig Belsham's midata blog:
I’m Richard and I chair one of the expert working groups looking at what we need to do to ensure that consumers can be confident when they allow their data to be passed to and used by third parties who are developing new and innovative applications to aggregate and use existing data in a way that brings benefits to users of these new services ... A data rich economy will allow lots of innovative companies to create brand new services that will enable you to take your data and do some really interesting things with it ...
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) exists to ensure that personal data remains private and that public data is disclosed unless it is exempt under the Freedom of Information Act. If the ICO doesn't close down mIL in the next few days, then it's not doing its job.

Mydex provides personal data stores (PDSs). midata relies on PDSs. That's the way BIS have designed it with the assistance of the midata strategy board. The chairman of Mydex is a member of the midata strategy board. BIS also retain Ctrl-Shift as consultants to advise them on midata. Ctrl-Shift advise BIS to use Mydex and, as readers of this blog know, Alan Mitchell, the director of Ctrl-Shift, set up Mydex with William Heath, the chairman of Mydex, the one who is also a member of the midata strategy board, and Mr Heath used to be a director of Ctrl-Shift and he retains a material shareholding in Ctrl-Shift, so you can understand why BIS, Mydex and Ctrl-Shift are among the Founding Partners of mIL.

Also, of course, Mydex is a UK-appointed  "identity provider", like Verizon, reinforcing the link to IDAP.

Jo Swinson is the successor at BIS to Norman Lamb who was the successor to Ed Davey. She wrote an article about midata which was published by Which?, who hosted a lengthy debate about the article on their website – 54 comments. No-one – including Which? – could see how midata would deliver the benefits that Jo Swinson and BIS promised.

Norman Lamb published a report on midata and launched a consultation on it. Question 6 of the consultation is: "What types of new services might be offered by intermediaries (such as, price comparison websites) and what could be the value of this new market?". In their response, Which? said, in full: "Which? has no comment on this question".

On the other hand, they wrote several pages in their response about the dangers of identity theft/fraud and the dangers of the loss of privacy. Are Which? satisfied that these dangers will not be exacerbated by midata? If so, why? And if not, will they, like the ICO, do their job of protecting consumers and warn people against midata?

In the case of all the Founding Partners named so far you can see why they are included in mIL. Even if, like the ODI, they shouldn't be.

But the BBC? What are the BBC doing there? They're a public service broadcaster. That's what the licence fee payers pay them to do. The BBC are not paid to talk twaddle with a lot of armchair economists. They are wasting our money, they shouldn't have joined in the first place and they should resign from mIL now.

When Ed Davey first announced midata, the BBC's own technology correspondent, Rory Cellan-Jones, asked "what's the catch for consumers and why is the government getting involved?". To which we may now add, why is the BBC getting involved?

midata and the BBC. The BBC?

from Craig Belsham's midata blog:
Hi I’m Dan, Director of the midata Innovation Lab, part of the midata voluntary programme ... we will help empower UK consumers in a really meaningful way ...
The BBC are not paid to talk twaddle with a lot of armchair economists.
They are wasting our money,
they shouldn't have joined in the first place
and they should resign from mIL now.

Following last week's exciting launch of the midata Innovation Lab (mIL), now that the party's over, let's take a look at the structure of the organisation. It's a partnership apparently, "a collaboration of the following 22 Founding Partners, respected organisations collaborating with real data to work out how the UK both empowers and protects consumers whilst innovating with data":


Monday, 1 April 2013

Martin Sorrell: if you don’t eat your children, someone else will

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph a few weeks back, Mr Sorrell explained quite openly what he means when he says that Business must embrace this digital revolution:
How can legacy businesses keep their traditional, profitable operations going, while the new digital upstarts bite into their businesses? It’s the old cannibalisation argument – if you don’t eat your children, someone else will.
He makes two points. One about data ...
We are increasingly embracing the application of technology to our business, along with big data, which means we are Maths Men as well as Mad Men ... the application of technology and big data have become areas of competitive differentiation ... the new and more complex sources of data, which these new media bring, mean that measurement of effectiveness and return on investment has become more achievable – although media fragmentation has made it more complex ... Big data – which to me means the collection of all sources of data (ours and our competitors’) and deployment on dashboards in real time – is for the first time a real possibility.
... and one about clients:
... our target customer is no longer just the chief executive officer and chief marketing officer but, increasingly, the chief information officer or chief technology officer, along with the chief procurement officer and chief financial officer.
Mr Sorrell's companies, remember, are the true users of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, et al –  together, the latter-day Pied Pipers of Hamelin.

You don't spend a farthing on using Google, Facebook and the others. Whereas Mr Sorrell's companies spend £46 billion a year with the Pied Pipers. They count. You don't.

To make sure that the money is spent wisely, the Mad Men need data. Lots of it. Remember that, when you read about the Department for Business Innovation and Skills's midata initiative. BIS may say that you will be in control of your own data. With £46 billion at stake, forget it.

The personal data to be stored by midata is indistinguishable in Whitehall's eyes from the government/public data to be mined for the UK's big data applications. You know that. That's why the same man is in charge of both projects – Professor Nigel Shadbolt.

Ex-Guardian man Mike Bracken, chief executive of the Government Digital Service (GDS), has recently announced changes in the governance of Whitehall, promoting CIOs (chief information officers) as the main ideas men for new digital services. When Mr Sorrell's men come knocking, they will be warmly welcomed. £46 billion buys you a lot of welcome.

It also buys you a lot of space. And GDS's GOV.UK has a lot of space. Take a look. All that lovely space down the left- and right-hand sides of the web page is just begging for advertisements.

And it buys you a lot of eyeballs. And with public services becoming digital-by-default, GDS can offer up to 60 million pairs.

It's a dish cooked in Heaven. Willing buyer, willing seller, everybody's happy. Everybody that counts, at least.

Feeling peckish, anyone?

Martin Sorrell: if you don’t eat your children, someone else will

Writing in the Sunday Telegraph a few weeks back, Mr Sorrell explained quite openly what he means when he says that Business must embrace this digital revolution:
How can legacy businesses keep their traditional, profitable operations going, while the new digital upstarts bite into their businesses? It’s the old cannibalisation argument – if you don’t eat your children, someone else will.

Friday, 30 November 2012

midata – the false prospectus. Every time you look, you see another mendacious argument

There is a peril in conflating the concepts of open data and personal data

Sometimes you sit down to write a post and you get to work on it, only to find that someone else has done it first – and what's more, in 22 words flat.
How Midata will affect business and consumers

Kathleen Hall
Tuesday 20 November 2012 12:47

As the government pushes private companies to release customer data under its Midata initiative, Computer Weekly looks at what this means for the digital economy and who stands to benefit most from this new form of "consumer empowerment".

The government's Department for Business, Innovation and Skills has singled out energy companies, mobile phone firms, banks and payment companies as key organisations that should release customer data to allow consumers to make more informed decisions under its Midata initiative ...
Ms Hall goes on to describe how midata will force suppliers who already provide us with a record of our transactions to provide us with a record of our transactions.

She introduces the reader to Professor Nigel Shadbolt, co-director with Professor Sir Tim Berners-Lee of the Open Data Institute (ODI). He believes that there is money to be made by people writing apps to process personal data and help them to make better decisions.

She interviews Nick Pickles, the director of Big Brother Watch, who has reservations about midata.

And she interviews Owen Boswarva:
Owen Boswarva, open data activist, warned there is a danger of consumers being blasé about their information being passed on to third parties. He said the potential risks were in danger of being de-emphasised.

“On the face of it, this is presented as being an unalloyed good thing, and you can’t argue with having more access to data. But it will depend on the checks and balances in how this is implemented,” he said.

Boswarva said he would like to see additional processes built in to ensure data is handled properly.

“There is a peril in conflating the concepts of open data and personal data, which I feel the government may be doing,” he said.

(Boswarva links added by DMossEsq,
not in Computer Weekly article)
And there it is. In 22 words. Admirable conciseness: "There is a peril in conflating the concepts of open data and personal data, which I feel the government may be doing". That's all that needs to be said.

Glutton for punishment?

Here's the DMossEsq 1,000-word version.

25 September 2012, and the Guardian publish Time for online users to devise a transparent internet we all could trust by Alastair Crawford, the founder of 192.com.

First we get:
... consumers have much to gain through sharing personal data and by understanding what data exists on them, either for making smarter purchases or exploring commercial opportunities – the government's Midata project, being debated in the enterprise and regulatory reform bill, enables consumers to demand the transaction data companies store on them. This will allow consumers to understand their spending patterns better and become smarter shoppers.
Followed by:
... a post-Wikileaks world requires accountability – if we are not accountable, someone will account for us. Perhaps this is the thinking behind the UK government's Open Data initiative, which makes public data available so we can better understand policy decisions and see the "raw data driving government forward".
And finally:.
It's particularly important that the biggest player in this equation remains the individual. The individual must be empowered to take greater control over the use of data created by and about him. As more data is created on people, there must be an ever more sensitive balance between privacy and accountability
Never mind the fact that equations don't normally have players in them, you see what's happened there?

Against a background of transparency, trust, understanding, smart shopping, accountability, empowerment and control, the argument moves from personal data to public data and back to personal as though they should both be open, as though they're comparable.

They're not.

It is not just legitimate but essential that Whitehall expose as much data as possible showing how they spend 700 billion of our pounds every year so that we can look for ways to get better value for money. There is no such imperative for individuals to expose their personal data – which is what midata would do – and there is every reason to reveal as little of it as possible.

On that basis, Professor Shadbolt's involvement with the ODI seems nothing but benign. But why is he involved with midata? Why is the co-director of the ODI (public data) also the chairman of the quite different midata (personal data)?

The answer centres on Garlik Ltd, a company the professor collaborated with (or founded) and which has now been sold to Experian, the credit referencing agency, which is one of the UK's seven appointed "identity providers".

Garlik helps people to avoid identity theft/fraud. So Professor Shadbolt has some relevant expertise in fighting fraud. Good. But then why would he promote midata, an initiative which can only increase the incidence of identity theft/fraud as people record more and more of their personal data, including logon IDs and passwords, in their personal data stores, on the web?

Every time you look at midata you see these contradictions:
  • midata promises to make suppliers provide statements. But they already do.
  • midata promises to give consumers control over their data. But that control is not midata's to give ...
  • ... and anyway, midata looks more like giving up control than gaining it ...
  • ... because the way midata works is that you hand over all your data to a trusted third party you have no reason to trust ...
  • ... who stores it on the web, which you know is a dangerous place to store it.
  • The advocates of midata promise loudly that it will boost the UK economy but admit that it might not ...
  • ... while staying very quiet about the way the scheme would work in practice and particularly the dangerous  need to create a personal data store on the web.
  • midata is supposed to help people make better decisions, but the only examples given are switching applications – switch mobile phone suppliers, switch gas and electricity suppliers, ... – and those applications already exist. We don't need new legislation.
  • midata involved introducing new regulations. The department for Business Innovation and Skills say it will have a de-regulatory effect.
  • ...
It's a false prospectus. One mendacious argument after another. Of which the elision of public and personal data is just one more.

----------

Added 27.12.12:
Government revives plan for greater data-sharing between agencies
... Guy Herbert, of the No2ID campaign, said he was alarmed to see the revival of the Blair government's database state policies. "There has been a consistent – and it can only be deliberate – habit in Whitehall of conflating 'public information', which most people take to mean information about the state, with information on the public held by state agencies. This has now been hooked on to the new administration's modish transparency, and is used to suggest that 'open data' implies opening us all up to inspection at official whim. It doesn't."