Friday Lunchtime Lectures   /     Friday Lunchtime Lecture: Creating an open register – what it takes and why

Description

A ‘register’ is an authoritative list of data you can trust. Government keeping and maintaining open registers can help us move beyond relying upon data which is published periodically to operating on data that is trustworthy, standardised and open. Used widely, registers will help the UK to build better services, more cheaply and quickly. In this talk, Paul Downey from the Government Digital Service will share his vision for what open registers can help achieve, and the characteristics an open register needs in order to appear on the new register.gov.uk domain. To demonstrate this, Paul will take a list of government data through the Register Design Authority process. About Paul Downey Paul works for the Government Digital Service (GDS), a part of the Cabinet Office whose job is the digital transformation of government. At GDS, Paul leads the Register Design Authority – a small team focused on building a service to help quickly establish open registers across government.

Subtitle
A ‘register’ is an authoritative list of data you…
Duration
00:53:06
Publishing date
2016-12-06 07:26
Link
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/odifridaylunchtimelectures/~3/7dN3RSuUb8Y/friday-lunchtime-lecture-creating-an-open-register-what-it-takes-and-why
Contributors
  The Open Data Institute
author  
Enclosures
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/odifridaylunchtimelectures/~5/zKKD5dozQsI/296473120-theodi-friday-lunchtime-lecture-creating-an-open-register-what-it-takes-and-why.mp3
audio/mpeg