2 December 2022
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See you in 2023!
Yes, it’s the most wonderful time of the year — when your inbox stops creaking from data-based geeking and I give you a few weeks off the newsletter for good behaviour. (Or rather, realise how much work and singing I have to do over the next few weeks and, for once, decide to be sensible/try to actually watch some of the World Cup.)
Thank you for sticking with the overload of links and surfeit of insufferable puns for another year. The newsletter will be back in January (with the long-promised analysis of the reader survey of a few months back, I’m sure you can barely contain your excitement — but thank you again to everyone who filled out the form or otherwise got in touch). I’m also on Twitter (if it’s still there) and Mastodon (hopefully finding some time at some point to give it a proper go).
Some things to look out for between now and next year:
- It’s the first Wednesday of the month next week so it must be Data Bites. Join me for a local government/levelling up special supported by Palantir. We’ll then be back on Thursday(!) 2 February — although there’s a chance we could sneak in a first ever January Data Bites before that. Sign up to the IfG newsletter and events email for early notice of that.
- You can also expect to see the fruits of another IfG project I’ve been working on blossom over the next month or two — on lessons we can learn from government data sharing during the pandemic. Our partners, Scott Logic, have already published a couple of blogposts — on getting the right people in the room and rules helping you go faster. Again, sign up to the IfG newsletter to get a first look.
- I’m going to stewarding the policy team for the ODI while they appoint a new head of public policy. If you’d like to apply, you can!
- At Connected by Data we’re waiting like kids for Christmas morning for more news about the Data Protection and Digital Information Bill. Do get in touch if you’d like to hear more about our plans.
- The work we’ve commissioned as part of the TICTeC Labs project at mySociety is starting to come in — everything from a toolkit for ensuring websites are accessible to an open data course will appear here.
- If you’re looking for a carol service in London, might I suggest the one happening at St Mary’s, Tottenham, at 6pm on Saturday 17 December? My choir will be performing — details of some further, smaller performances to follow.
And:
- Thanks to Latinometrics for suggesting a few more additions to my spreadsheet of data newsletters.
- A big thank you to Think Digital for inviting me to speak at and co-host their Think Data for Government conference this week — keep an eye out for future iterations.
- And thanks to Jill for sending this in my direction (warning: spoilers), which decides some of my viewing this Christmas. Other content with people making fictional government relevant to real ones is available.
Have a wonderful Christmas, and an excellent start to 2023!
Gavin
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Today’s links:
Graphic content
While my Qatar gently weeps
- Qatar World Cup: Which team is predicted to win? (Sky News)
- World Cup (Reuters)
- What Qatar Built for the Most Expensive World Cup Ever* (Bloomberg)
- The tiniest World Cup host ever (Axios)
- Fitting the World Cup into tiny Qatar (Washington Post)
- From 1966 to now: the evolution of World Cup football (The Athletic)
- Do population, democracy and wealth help win the World Cup? (The Athletic)
- Everyone knows the most fun way to watch the World Cup is to support the more democratic nation in each game (Chris Hanretty with V-Dem Institute data)
- Fifa World Cup 2022 in Qatar: football in the desert (SCMP, via Fair Warning)
- The financial, environmental and human cost of the Qatar World Cup* (New Statesman)
- World Cup 2022: How Teams Can Advance to the Round of 16* (New York Times)
- 2022 World Cup Predictions (FiveThirtyEight)
- 1978 — Germany have lost a World Cup game in which they led at half-time for the first time since 1978 (Opta)
- The U.S. Played To Win Against Iran — And It Worked (FiveThirtyEight)
- Is the World Cup a giant waste of money?* (The Economist)
A feast for the Census
- Ethnic group, national identity, language, and religion: Census 2021 in England and Wales (ONS)
- Religion, England and Wales: Census 2021 (ONS — New Statesman take)
- Census maps (ONS)
- A massive amount of fascinating stuff in today’s #Census2021 release (Telegraph)
Ukraine
- Vladimir Putin wants to be a conqueror* (The Economist)
- Russia is using energy as a weapon* (The Economist)
UK politics
- All governments end in failure — Rishi Sunak starts at a lower point than most of his predecessors (Ipsos)
- Chester: The first by-election since the pound crashed and Rishi Sunak became PM — what could result mean? (Sky News)
- THEY THINK IT’S ALL OVER Can the Tories turn it round? (Lord Ashcroft Polls)
- The true Brexit divide is now between pragmatists and zealots (FT — I think I’d have put the ‘don’t know’ in the middle)
- Fixing Brexit: A New Agenda for a New Partnership With the European Union (Tony Blair Institute for Global Change)
- BEST AUTUMN STATEMENT CHARTS (Ed Conway)
- What does the autumn statement mean for public services? (IfG)
- How Britain’s economic woes stack up against Europe’s — a close look at the figures (The Guardian)
Crises? What crises?
- Backlog Britain: How public sector delays spiralled to record levels (FT)
- A&E: when are waits shortest? (Martin Rosenbaum)
- My local GP tool: Check NHS appointment delays and face-to-face availability* (Telegraph)
- EXCLUSIVE: Health chiefs slapped down by stats watchdog over ‘misleading’ nurse pay graph (Mirror)
- Covid-stretched NHS has led to deadly consequences for heart care* (New Statesman)
- NHS spending: Inflation and demand growth to wipe out almost all of £3.3bn extra funding announced by chancellor (Sky News)
- Six things we learned about educational outcome gaps in England post-pandemic (Nesta)
- Housing questions (Ben W. Ansell)
- No-fault evictions driving up homelessness rates in the north of England (Sky News)
- How net migration to the UK has hit record levels* (New Statesman)
- UK debt rises to highest level in 60 years* (New Statesman)
- Firefighters and doctors brace for winter fires as people turn to cheap heating* (New Statesman)
- How benefits have plummeted in value* (New Statesman)
- Britain Opened the Door to Online Gambling. Now It’s Living With the Consequences (Bloomberg)
- England’s water: the world’s piggy bank (The Guardian)
- Down the drain: how billions of pounds are sucked out of England’s water system (The Guardian)
Energy and environment
- Europe’s Energy Risks Go Beyond Gas* (New York Times)
- Climate graphic of the week: Will the world phase down coal within 8 years?* (FT)
- Can Europe keep the lights on? (FT)
- Europe’s Energy Crunch* (Bloomberg)
- Junk Carbon Offsets Are What Make These Big Companies ‘Carbon Neutral’ (Bloomberg)
- Britons are reducing energy use to save money — and the environment* (New Statesman)
- In 30 years of UN climate negotiations, eliminating the primary cause of global heating — fossil fuels — has never been mentioned in the decisions (via Matthias Schmelzer)
- Extreme Heat Will Change Us* (New York Times)
- Global floods and droughts will intensify sooner than expected, studies show* (FT)
UK
- How much data analysts (and other data roles) get paid in UK nonprofits (Data Orchard)
- London’s Cheapest Borough Is Booming on Rail, Boat Rides to City (Bloomberg)
- Top London Properties Owned By Russian Oligarchs Are Frozen in Time (Bloomberg)
USA
- The Exceptionally American Problem of Rising Roadway Deaths* (The Upshot)
- How #electiontwitter took over the political prediction game* (FT)
- Megadonors tighten grip on Republican fundraising* (FT)
- Why the Fight for the House Was Surprisingly Competitive* (Bloomberg)
- How abortion rights fared in the midterms (Reuters)
- Midterm Elections Produce More States Controlled by One Party* (Wall Street Journal)
- Did Redistricting Cost Democrats The House? (FiveThirtyEight)
- High-profile Republicans gain followers in first weeks of Musk’s reign (Washington Post)
- Joe Biden has appointed more female and non-white judges than any of his predecessors* (The Economist)
- American police forces perpetuate racial stereotypes on social media* (The Economist)
- Millennials shut out of the housing market, again (Washington Post)
- On upward mobility (The Pudding)
- Bills targeting trans youth are growing more common — and radically reshaping lives (NPR)
International
- The world’s most, and least, expensive cities* (The Economist)
- Are we ready for the approaching loneliness epidemic? (FT)
- In just 60 seconds, this clever video shows more than 200 years of change in country health, wealth and population size (EEAGLI, via r/dataisbeautiful and Conrad Hackett)
- Infrastructure procurement risks: What data-led analysis reveals in Indonesia (Open Contracting Partnership)
- Egypt’s audacious plan to build a new capital in the desert (National Geographic)
- ‘No way we can open’: China’s zero-Covid exit plans unravel* (FT)
#dataviz
- Information is Beautiful Awards 2022: The Winners (Information is Beautiful Awards)
- A lil process for an @AxiosVisuals chart (Axios)
- #30DayMapChallenge
Meta data
Safety first
- New protections for children and free speech added to internet laws (DCMS)
- Online Safety Bill — Update (DCMS)
- In a letter to @DCMS @michelledonelan the Children’s Coalition calls on the #OnlineSafetyBill to return to the House now to receive needed amendments (via 5Rights Foundation)
- How well do you know the Online Safety Bill? (Cyberleagle)
- Deep Dive: The United Kingdom’s Online Safety Bill (Wikimedia)
- The Online Safety Bill will set the foundation for future regulation* (New Statesman)
- Encouraging self-harm to be criminalised in Online Safety Bill (BBC News)
Deeply DPDIB
- Towards Effective Supervisory Oversight? Analysing UK Regulatory Enforcement of Data Protection and Electronic Privacy Rights and the Government’s Statutory Reform Plans (David Erdos — and on timing…)
- How can business prepare for changes in data legislation? (Computing)
- GDPR is no longer fit for purpose for advertisers — here’s how it could be (The Drum)
Musk we?
- Mastodon’s Moment (The Markup)
- Thousands Have Joined Mastodon Since Twitter Changed Hands. Its Founder Has a Vision for Democratizing Social Media* (Time)
- Elon Musk’s Twitter Teeters on the Edge After Another 1,200 Leave* (New York Times)
- Look, I’m just a schmuck who speaks to people inside Twitter, but I’m not certain you can run a company with 7,500 staff just weeks ago with a staff of less than 900 now (Chris Stokel-Walker)
- EU privacy enforcer puts Elon Musk on notice as Twitter melts down (Politico)
- How to download an archive of your Twitter data (The Verge)
- A reminder to tech law/policy/etc people moving to mastodon/fediverse for you to add yourself to this spreadsheet which you can download, peruse and import (Michael Veale)
UK government
- Ransomware incidents now make up majority of British government’s crisis management COBRA meetings (The Record)
- Defra appoints Telespazio UK as Service Provider for Key Environmental Data Platform (Telespazio)
- Cabinet Office alerted to data breach — and fails to respond for 10 days (Civil Service World)
- Digital by default — the day has arrived (HM Land Registry)
- Leader’s view: Reflections from COP27 (Defra digital, data and technology)
- UK civil servants warn over lack of digital resources and skills* (FT)
- Science and innovation focus: Read the November 2022 issue (Civil Service World)
- Cabinet Office warned of ‘serious risk’ to services as UKCloud customers hit with sevenfold price increase (Civil Service World)
- HMRC official highlights challenges for One Login (UK Authority)
- Analyse this (Civil service)
- Sarah Healey: The Future Challenges for Digital Policy Making (Strand Group)
- A thread to pay tribute to my wonderful colleague Alison Whitney OBE, who sadly died last week. Alison was one of the most influential & effective people in setting up the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (Ciaran Martin)
International
- UK finalises landmark data decision with South Korea to help unlock millions in economic growth (DCMS)
- UK and Ukraine agree ground-breaking digital trade deal (DIT)
- International transfers: empowering innovation and growth whilst protecting people’s personal information (ICO)
- The day-to-day of digital transformation: how governments are honing their data strategies (Global Government Forum)
- This German news outlet is teaching people about local politics with an in-person game (Nieman Lab)
- India releases more tech friendly data protection bill after backlash* (FT)
- The Digital Data Protection Bill of #India just dropped! (Dr Gabriela Zanfir-Fortuna)
- Rewiring society: The ODI in conversation with Taiwan’s Digital Minister Audrey Tang (ODI)
Stat’s the way, aha aha, I like it
- Powering population statistics with innovation and consistency (ONS)
- Transforming R&D statistics: the next steps (ONS)
- How am I represented in Census 2021 data? (ONS)
Information health
- NHS’s Palantir Deal Draws Legal Threat From Patient Groups* (Bloomberg)
- NHS breaks up £400mn data contract in response to privacy concerns* (FT)
- In pursuit of balance: unlocking the power of data whilst preserving public trust (National Data Guardian)
- An app for Long Covid (Rory Cellan-Jones)
Open for the best, expecting the worst
- This one weird trick could fix the British economy: Free the data, free the people (James O’Malley)
- Fourth National Action Plan (New Zealand Government, Open Government Partnership)
- Democratic Infrastructure: Turning One-Off Deliberations into Resilient Democracies (Democratic Society)
- The personal Twitter accounts of all Scot Gov ministers have been deleted from their official profiles (via Sam Taylor)
- Today’s European Court of Justice (@EUCourtPress) judgement on public access to beneficial ownership information is significant (Open Ownership)
- Proposed Freedom of Information Reform (Scotland) Bill (Scottish Parliament)
- Open banking should be a blueprint to create more competition across sectors (City AM)
- 6 reasons why the public sector should work in the open that aren’t code re-use (dxw)
- I’ve been given a copy of DHSC’s internal FOI training tangentially to one of my requests. Some of it’s quite entertaining. (George Greenwood)
Tech
- The tech sector meltdown is only a hiccup — better times lie ahead* (Sunday Times)
- Startup founders go to war with UK government over its moves to appoint bank into key ecosystem role (TechCrunch)
- The woes of startup Britishvolt should shock the UK out of its Brexit self-delusion (The Guardian)
- Tanya O’Carroll v Meta; Landmark case to stop Facebook spying on us (AWO)
- Why Meta’s latest large language model survived only three days online* (MIT Technology Review)
- Meta AI presents CICERO (Meta)
AI got ‘rithm
- The Exploited Labor Behind Artificial Intelligence (NOEMA)
- Gig workers in India are uniting to take back control from algorithms (Rest of World)
- AI Art Is Eating The World, And We Need To Discuss Its Wonders And Dangers (Techdirt)
- The Artificial Intelligence and Data Act needs a reset (The Hill Times)
Tales from the crypto
- Polyamory, penthouses and plenty of loans: inside the crazy world of FTX (The Observer)
- Stephen Diehl: Crypto is the ‘commoditisation of populist anger, gambling and crime’* (FT)
Everything else
- Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power (Ada Lovelace Institute)
- Inform, educate, entertain… and recommend? (Ada Lovelace Institute)
- To understand uses of personal data in the present, people draw on the past and imagine the future (LSE Impact)
- Data now, not later: why real-time information represents a step change for policymakers (Global Government Forum)
- Why you should get the right people in the room from the start (Scott Logic)
- Rules help you go faster (Scott Logic)
- Education Data Futures: Critical, Regulatory and Practical Reflections (5Rights Foundation)
- New report proposes six policy lessons to address digital inequality (British Academy)
- Anonymous data: Emerging risks in the data economy (ODI)
Opportunities
- The NHS AI Lab Skunkworks want to find AI solutions for your problems (NHS England)
- EVENT: Rethinking data and rebalancing power: building a digital ecosystem that works for people and society (Ada Lovelace Institute)
- JOB: Chief Information Officer (NHS England)
- JOB: Head of Information Management (Cabinet Office)
- JOB: Principal Data Scientist (HMT)
- JOB: Digital Strategy Advisor (CDDO, via Jukesie)
- JOB: Head of Statistical Dissemination and Development (DfT)
- JOB: LOTI seeks Skills and Talent Manager (LOTI)
- JOB: Public Participation & Research Lead (Ada Lovelace Institute)
- JOB: Visiting Senior Researcher (Algorithmic auditing) (Ada Lovelace Institute)
- JOB: Director of Digital Footprints (UKRI)
- JOB: Communications and Engagement Officer (Urban Big Data Centre)
- JOB: Digital Divide & Sustainability Intern (Good Things Foundation)
And finally…
Words
- Alan MacMasters: How the great online toaster hoax was exposed (BBC News)
- The new ChatGPT feature from OpenAI is truly amazing (Brian Klaas, via Alice)
- Looking at Retained EU Law FOIs and this is a *doozy* of a response (Peter Wells)
Pictures
- Wait a second, these are not real error bars… (Josemari Feliciano, via Ben)
- All A roads and motorways in Great Britain, in order (Alasdair Rae)
- Thanksgiving turkeys will be more expensive this year* (The Economist)
- Axios. What. Is. Happening.
Everything else