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Ideas

Big Data, Part 1

We leave a digital trail behind us everywhere we go: the calls we make, the emails we send, the links on which we click, the websites and documents that we retrieve. This also includes our social relationships, habits, preferences, even our movements in space and time. IDEAS, CBC RADIO ONE in partnership with the MUNK School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto weighs the opportunities, the risks -- and the trade-offs -- as the world of Big Data relentlessly changes our lives. Part 2 airs Thursday, June 30.

Big Data Part 1

8 years ago
Duration 0:59
We leave a digital trail behind us everywhere we go: the calls we make, the emails we send, the links on which we click, the websites and documents that we retrieve. This also includes our social relationships, habits, preferences, even our movements in space and time.

We leave a digital trail behind us everywhere we go: the calls we make, the emails we send, the links on which we click, the websites and documents that we retrieve. This also includes our social relationships, habits, preferences, even ourmovements in space and time. IDEAS, CBC RADIO ONE in partnership with the MUNK School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto weighs the opportunities, the risks -- and the trade-offs -- as the world of Big Data relentlessly changes our lives. Part 2 airs Monday, October 17.**This episode originally aired June 23, 2016.


Professor Anita McGahan on Big Data and the future of work




BIG DATA, Part 1: The Promise and the Perils of Big Data for Business,forConsumers, and for Society

For business, the promise of Big Datais at least as great as that of the Internet itself. Companies can now anticipate what consumers want even before we know it ourselves. As consumers, we get more of what we want, when we want it. But we must also live under constant surveillance as companies chase down the opportunities that we create for them online.

L to R: John Weigelt, Anita McGahan, Ashkan Soltan, Stephen Toope (Lisa Sakulensky)

Anita M. McGahan, Professor of Strategic Management at the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto; Ashkan Soltani,independent researcher and technologist specializing on issues relating to privacy, security, and behavioral economics,andformer Chief of Technology for the Federal Trade Commission in Washington DC; John Weigelt, National Technology Officer, Microsoft Canada; and moderator Stephen Toope, Director of the Munk School of Global Affairsconsider the consequences of Big Data as it changesbusiness -- and our lives --for betterand for worse.

Big Data,Part 1was recorded in front of a live audience at theMunkSchool of Global Affairson May 9, 2016. Listen to the Question and Answer session which followed the panel.

Big Data, Part 1 - Question and Answer Session




Panelists:

"The sheer amount of data today - about all of us - is so vast, it's so BIG, because we live so much of our lives online."
--
AnitaM.McGahan

Anita M. McGahan
Anita M. McGahan is Professor and Rotman Chair in Management at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto. She is cross appointed to the Munk School of Global Affairs and to the Medical School; is a Senior Associate at the Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard University; and is Chief Economist at the Massachusetts General Hospital Division for Global Health and Human Rights. In 2013, she was elected by the Academy of Management's membership to the Board of Governors and into the Presidency rotation. In 2014, she joined the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Opening Governance. Her credits include three books and over 100 articles, case studies, notes and other published material on competitive advantage, industry evolution, and financial performance. McGahan's current research emphasizes entrepreneurship in the public interest and innovative collaboration between public and private organizations.



"I think the impact to consumers and the impact to society as a whole resulting from Big Data and from the presence of all this information creates an incredible transformation and an incredible risk for people. I don't think a lot of people understand how things are changing and how much data is being collected and who really has access."
--AshkanSoltani
Ashkan Soltani
Ashkan Soltani is an independent researcher and technologist specializing in privacy, security, and behavioural economics. His work draws attention to privacy problems online, demystifies technology for the non-technically inclined, and provides data-driven insights to help inform policy. He's previously served a brief stint as a Senior Advisor in the White House and as the Chief Technologist for the Federal Trade Commission, advising the commission on its technology related policy. Ashkan wasalso recognized as part of the 2014 Pulitzer prize team for his contributions to the Washington Post's coverage of National Security issues. He was also the primary technical consultant on the WSJ's investigative series: "What They Know", which was also finalist for 2012 Pulitzer Prize. Ashkan lives in Washington, DC and loves Japanese ramen.



"Just over 26 years ago, they launched the Hubble telescope and it provided us a whole new perspective of that ever-changing expanding universe of matter around us. Big Data promises to do the same thing: to transform our lives by giving us a new perspective of that ever-expanding universe of data around us. It changes every aspect of our lives."
--JohnWeigelt

John Weigelt
John Weigelt leads Microsoft Canada's strategic policy and technology efforts. In this role, Mr. Weigelt helps business and governments innovate with technology while avoiding the unintended consequences that might arise. He leads Canadian outreach for Economic Development, Privacy, Security, Critical Infrastructure Protection, Government 3.0, Accessibility, Environmental Sustainability and Interoperability.A strategic thinker, John has contributed to the development of international standards and guidelines, government policies, national strategies, provincial and federal legislation. These contributions range from the detailed technical specificity of protocol definition to macroeconomic principles.


Moderator:
Stephen Toope
Professor Stephen J. Toopeis Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs. Before joining the Munk School in January 2015, Professor Toope was President of the University of British Columbia from 2006 to 2014. He represented Western Europe and North America on the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances from 2002-2007. He continues to conduct research on many aspects of international law and is currently working on issues of continuity and change in international law, and the origins of international obligation in international society. Before joining UBC, Toope was President of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, and Dean of Law at McGill. A Canadian citizen, Professor Toope earned his PhD from Trinity College, Cambridge, his degrees in common law (LLB) and civil law (BCL) with honours from McGill University, and graduated magna cum laude with his AB in History and Literature from Harvard University.



Related websites:

From Anita McGahan

  • Beth Noveck talk:This talk gives a brilliant description of what is possible with Big Data as distinct from small data.


From Ashkan Soltani


From John Weigelt


Reading List:

FromAnitaMcGahan

  • TimBerners-Leeon data ownership:A crucial issue facing businesses that seek to build on big data is ownership.Who owns the data itself? This article byBerners-Leedescribes the issues and what's at stake.

  • McKinseyreport on Big Data: Despite the fact that this report is several years old now, it still stands as one of the best comprehensive descriptions of the impact of Big Data out there.



From Ashkan Soltani

  • Dave Eggers, The Circle, 2014:While this is fiction, it's consider by some to be one of the more accurate accounts of the life and culture in the many nameless technology firms that are sprouting up all over the world.
  • Gary Shteyngart, Super Sad True Love Story, 2011:Fantastically entertaining read about love in an era of big data. Written only 5 years ago, it takes place in a near future that will be very familiar to most.


From John Weigelt

  • Nicholas Carr, The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google, W. W. Norton & Company; June 10, 2013.
  • Tony Hey, Stewart Tansley, Kristin Tolle, The Fourth Paradigm: Data-Intensive Scientific Discovery, Microsoft Research; October 16, 2009.

The Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto brings together the best minds to advance the latest thinking on global issues. Its mission is to integrate research on global affairs with teaching and public education.



**Big Data was produced by Sara Wolch


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