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The Europe Roundup: Cybercrime in the UK, Ushahidi in Serbia, Big Data in Norway

BY Antonella Napolitano | Friday, February 10 2012

Photo: Ian Muttoo / Flickr
  • UK | Three Regional Hubs to Fight Cybercrime Nationally

    The UK Metropolitan Police has launched three regional teams to work on cybercrime with the the Metropolitan Police Centre e-crime Unit. The effort is aimed at improving the police work on cybercrime prevention, reports BBC:

    A training period is required before the hubs will be fully operational, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Janet Williams, who heads ACPO's e-crime efforts, said. 

    [...] "It is anticipated the hubs will make a significant contribution to the 'national harm reduction' target of £504m." 

    Harm reduction is calculated using a "harm matrix" - a system which factors in costs such as how much the criminal stood to gain, how much money was invested in the crime, and the potential cost to the victim.

    The news comes a week after the hack of a call between Scotland Yard and FBI officers, leaked by hackers collective Anonymous.

  • Serbia | A Ushahidi Platform to Track Reports from Areas Hit by Snowfalls

    In the past few days the Adriatic area suffered from unusual freezing conditions: temperatures fell low and massive snow storms have hit Italy, Greece and Serbia.

    Global Voices reports that in Serbia Al Jazeera Balkans and Ushahidi joined forces to create an online map to track problems and disservices in the areas that were hit by snow storms. A similar platform was used in the area after an earthquake back in 2010.

    Global Voices also writes that other actions have been organized by the online community in Serbia by using the hashtag #lopataup (#shovelup).

  • Norway |  Deluge: Finding Patterns in Public Data

    Norwegian developer Even Westwang created a fascinating animation called "Deluge" showing how 300,000 of his compatriots move every year in the country.

    Westvang used data that were publicly available on tax records, birth date, income and address, in order to be able to trace the move and find patterns.

    Deluge from even westvang on Vimeo.

    Westvang (also a speaker at Nordic Techpolitcs, an event in cooperation with PdF) has also created skoleporten, an interactive map that visualizes data from Norwegian school test results. In that occasion, datasets were obtained by Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet.no using the Norwegian FOIA, noted PdF friend and speaker Bente Kalsnes.

Plus 

  • The UK Supreme Court will accept freedom of information requests via Twitter
  • Actor, director and Twitter-star Stephen Fry declared his public (and, possibly, economical) support to Paul Chambers through his ordeal. Chambers was arrested on terrorism charges after posting a joke tweet on Twitter, two years ago.
  • The Open Knowledge Foundation is bringing Open Government Data Camp (OGDCamp) and Open Knowledge Conference (OKCon) together next September in Helsinki, Finland. Save the date!

News Briefs

RSS Feed friday >

Cherokee Nation Members Start Online Effort Against Elizabeth Warren

Self-described members of the Cherokee Nation have begun an online effort critical of Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren's controversial claims of Native American heritage, as was first reported by The Republican in Springfield, Massachusetts. GO

Poetry of the Email Subject Line: Deadline Edition

There's something about a monthly fundraising deadline that brings out the romantic in our presidential campaign email subject line writers... GO

thursday >

California State Senate Moves Key Transparency Bills

The California State Senate approved on Thursday a couple of key transparency bills that will both help to make government documents more accessible online, and provide funding for the state's decrepit online finance disclosure system Cal-Access. GO

What to Make of "Twitchy," Michelle Malkin's Fan for Twitter Flames

The GOP new media machine tries to chase the spotlight anywhere it goes online, even going so far as to famously jump in on hashtags used by the White House or Obama campaign. It's just not clear what this exactly does for them. A case in point is Twitchy, a platform launched earlier this year by conservative commentator Michelle Malkin that picks out individual tweets to present on a website along with a few words of commentary. While it ventures into sports and culture news, its primary use seems to be to amplify the conservative hashtag wars, starting some fights and continuing others. GO

Obama Ad Targets Romney on Boston Globe Homepage

As various campaign officials pointed out on Twitter, the Obama campaign has bought a large ad criticizing Mitt Romney on the front of one of the Boston Globe's homepages, Boston.com. Apparently limited to Massachusetts-area web visitors, the ad proclaims that "Romney Economics didn't work for Massachusetts. It won't work for America." ... GO

wednesday >

California Controller John Chiang Hires Open Data Advocate And Tech Industry Outreach Director

California Controller John Chiang has hired open government advocate Tina Lee as the office's Bay Area director of outreach and innovation. GO

Democrats Create "Unlikeable" Romney Facebook Timeline for Video

The Democratic National Committee has released a video that constructs its own version of Mitt Romney's Facebook timeline. Using the motto "Little to Like," it's a "celebration" of Romney officially winning enough delegates for his nomination. GO

Transparency Advocates Frustrated With House Appropriators' Plan To Make A Plan

Open government advocates are up in arms over what appears to be another attempt by government bureaucrats to stall the move to enable bulk data downloads of legislative information online. GO

Open-Source Software for Governments in Spain

Two autonomous regions of Spain have recently made strides towards promoting open-source software for governmental use. GO

tuesday >

Twitter Hires a Director of Public Policy for Europe

Twitter has hired Sinéad McSweeney, director of communications for Garda Síochána, Ireland's national police service, as its director of public policy for Europe, according to Twitter's government account. McSweeney previously worked in the same role for the Police Service of Northern Ireland, and also served as special adviser to two attorneys general, David Byrne and Michael McDowell. She will be based in the company's office in Dublin. GO

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