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5 Lessons We Learned From Open Belgium 2018

By Julia Ann-Kathrin Thomaschki on Mar 23, 2018

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On March 12th, the World Wide Web’s 29th birthday, 250 Open Knowledge and Open Data enthusiasts gathered in Louvain-la-Neuve, ready to enable access for everyone to a web worth having. The whole day was designed to get an update on local, national and global open initiatives as well as to share skills, expertise and ideas with like minded open data peers.

Audience


What was new at Open Belgium 2018

This year’s Open Belgium Conference hosted 51 speakers from government, industry, academia and community that shared their knowledge in 35 Sessions. The presentations covered everything around Open Knowledge and Open Data, from the economic value to sustainability, privacy issues, technical challenges and solutions.

  • o Open Belgium has worked hard to make the conference affordable for everyone. Ticket prices were reduced by half from 2017. This year Solidarity Tickets were introduced; with purchase of this category ticket, one enables two less fortunate data enthusiasts to attend Open Belgium 2018.


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  • o For the first time in Open Belgium history, the whole event was live-streamed and followed by 450 people online on that day.



  • o This year next to the main track in English, a side track in French for Wallonian public authorities was organized.



Who attended Open Belgium 2018?

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While it’s difficult to choose amongst the wide variety of topics I would like to share with you My 5 personal highlights:

The web is under threat, and only we can save it!


The event traditionally kicked off with the overview of the State of Open Knowledge in Belgium. Delivered by Toon Vanagt, the chairman of Open Knowledge Belgium and Benoit Hucq, Director General of Digital Wallonia, the speech this year was oriented around transforming Belgium via greater Awareness, Empowerment, and Governance. While highlighting the advances in Belgium since last year, the presentation didn’t forget to shed light on the controversy around the new GDPR regulations, and caution against taking it as an excuse for locking up data, and keeping it accessible by only a few. Find all Presentation Slides and Videos here

Other keynote speakers:
Heleen Vollers - Watch 'Best Open Data Practices across Europe'
Maarten Lambrecht - Watch '12 Reasons why your data is not fully open'

Linked Open Data Lessons


LOD Diving right into the day with a multitude of Linked Open Data talks. Eight talks presented the role of linked and interoperable data within different domains, amongst those cultural heritage resources, touristic data, film archives up to the digitalisation of public administrations. The obstacles related to interoperability are shared amongst all sectors and I would like share following lessons by Agis Papantoniou to overcome them.



Making Data:

  • o reusable - publish raw data and not HTML or PDFs
  • o comprehensive and interoperable - Add metdata
  • o findable - use intuitive links to optimize data browsing
  • o accessible - store data in stable locations and encoded in URIs
  • o reusable use open licenses like CC 4.0
  • o use LOD Quality Assurance Frameworks


How to unlock your data’s full potential


Kasper Van Lombeek In a session on Open Business Models, Kasper Van Lombeek, Founder of Rockestate shared how the start-up calculated various properties for all houses in Belgium (e.g. the building type, roof inclination, number of rooms).

They use the Open Lidar data-set and apply latest artificial intelligence techniques to combine their open geo data* with their customer’s data to build predictive 3D models that can radically change business and industry. Presentation here

*Open Geo Data is every publicly available piece of information with a spatial dimension.

Other speakers in the Open for Business Session:
- Philippe Duchesne - Open Data Annotations.
- Sebaastian Ter Bur, Hessel Van Oorschot, Jolan Soens, Winnie Poncelet, Gwen Franck - Open For Business

Don’t publish data without reuse


At 2:30 pm Frank Verschoor and Jochem Van de Berg from The Green Land successfully beat the inclining afternoon slump with their interactive session explaining how to effectively use open data in practice. At the example of their project ‘Flevoland (NL) Smarter’, they showed the impact of active listening and preferencing needs over assumptions on data utility.

To conclude, Open Data are only valuable when they meet needs, so don’t publish data without reuse!

The future of data is frictionless


Vitor Baptista, Engineering Lead at Open Knowledge International hosted the “Using Frictionless Data software to turn data into insight” hackathon. OKI's Frictionless Data Initiative is about making it effortless to transport quality data among different tools and platforms for further analysis. Unfortunately, not all attendees had brought their own laptop, but those that did were introduced to the software that streamlines data workflow process, and learned how to add metadata and to validate datasets.

Be part of a vibrant open source, open data community

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What’s next…?


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For you who still don’t have enough of Open Knowledge and Open Data, check out the 8th edition of Open Summer of Code 2018.

The 4-week summer programme in July provides Belgian based students the training, network, and support necessary to transform open innovation projects into powerful real-world services.

See you at Open Belgium 2019!



Thanks for reading my personal highlights, it was really tough to choose between all the fantastic presentations! Find all presentations here. Videos will follow soon, and for more Open Belgium pictures see Wikimedia

Lastly, a big thank you to the partners that made Open Belgium 2018 possible!

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written by Julia Ann-Kathrin Thomaschki
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