Awesome, Phil!

 

All valid --- just missing prioritization and integration with existing
targets. GREAT START!

 

--Steve Repetti

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Phil Wolff
Sent: Friday, November 19, 2010 11:50 AM
To: [email protected];
[email protected]
Subject: [DataPortability-Public] DataPortability Roadmap Ideas for
2011/2012

 

I posted this to my blog yesterday afternoon, a collection of ideas not all
my own. bit.ly/aWsU7i Imagine what we'd look like with money and people
after 24 months.

 

 <http://www.flickr.com/photos/philwolff/3838863104/> lmdg-masthead01b

I'm heading into a meeting this afternoon to talk about the DataPortability
Project <http://www.dataportability.org/>  with a web site policy expert.
Data portability policy <http://portabilitypolicy.org/>  as disclosure is a
nice and needed start. Looking ahead, what might the data portability
movement produce over the next year or two? Not in any order.

A Portability Gallery. Examples of data portability in action. Less about
cautionary tales and more showing what can happen for people, groups and
businesses when it works. 

A Doctrine. The portability policy model is descriptive. This would be
prescriptive. A positive statement using the language of "must" and "should"
and "rights" and "good." 

An Issue for the 2012 federal and state election cycle. "Dear Candidate,
where do you stand on."

An academic conference on defining the rights of people over their own data,
perhaps defining new rights not extant in current law. 

A Portability Policy Bootstrap Consulting Methodology. A project plan that
brings the right stakeholders together to learn about the portability
issues, to assign research into existing portability practices, to organize
and present the results internally, to activate the procedures needed to
keep the results fresh, to create processes for engaging with external
stakeholders on data portability matters, and to publish the results inside
and outside the organization. 

A Portability Policy Consulting Association. Members share their best
practices for helping companies adopt, improve, and troubleshoot portability
policies and practices. 

A Portability Policy Audit Methodology. Checklists, procedures, and measures
of completeness/quality when assessing whether a portability policy is
complete, in plain language, and true. 

A Portability Auditor Association. Members share their own best practices
for data portability policy audits, define standards for certification,
discuss best ways to market portability policy audits as parts of their
larger financial/legal/IT compliance service portfolio. 

Data Portability Audit Software. To help auditors validate compliance with
company policy. 

DataPortability.gov. The US government's guide to data portability for
citizens, agencies and contractors. I could see pointers to citizen tools,
education, and feedback. Links to agency data portability policies and
action pages. 

Data Portability Ombudsman Services. Like the Better Business Bureau meets
GetSatisfaction <http://getsatisfaction.com/> . Company-sponsored customer
dispute resolution. 

Model Language for API Terms of Service. Similar to the customer-facing
policy, these boilerplate choices would spell out the data portability
obligations of service partners who use your customers' data. 

Watchdog Network. Volunteers holding sites accountable, naming names,
talking to the press, in the spirit of privacy and environmental activists.
Let My Data Go!

Crisis network. Rapid intervention when something bad happens. A site
closes, threatening to lose a million users' data. A site ejects a user and
the user needs an ombudsman. A sites data portability policy no longer
reflects what they really do. 

A Data Portability Media Group. A listserv of bloggers, analysts and
reporters who've written about data portability and who cover portability
issues. 

A Speakers Bureau. From neighborhood meetups and chamber meetings to
industry conferences and college lectures, a place to find speakers. 

Hmmm. Catchy but very ambitious. 

What about reality? What about resources? 

Let's pick that up in part 2 next month. 

If you can help me get my hands on my data, call me at
<skype:+15103435664?call> +1-510-343-5664,  <skype:evanwolf?chat> Skype me,
follow  <http://twitter.com/skypejournal> @SkypeJournal and
<http://www.twitter.com/evanwolf> @evanwolf.  <http://tinyurl.com/sjchat>
Visit our Skype Journal private technologist roundtable, one of the longest
running public Skype chats.


Phil Wolff
managing editor, Skype Journal
http://SkypeJournal.com
[email protected]
skype:evanwolf
+1-510-444-8234 San Francisco
+1-510-316-9773 mobile
http://www.linkedin.com/in/philwolff
http://www.facebook.com/philwolff
http://twitter.com/evanwolf
http://dataportability.org 

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