The pace of life and industry is accelerating at an unprecedented rate. Interconnected tech, inconceivably fast data processing capabilities and sophisticated methods of using this data all mean that we’re living in fast-forward. The Data Natives Conference 2018 will be exploring life at an accelerated pace, and what rapid innovation means for cutting-edge tech (blockchain, big data analytics, AI) across industries.
From governments to genomic projects, the quickening of life, work and research impacts every industry- and Data Natives 2018 offers two intense days of workshops, panels and talks to explore this impact. With more than 100 speakers presenting over 48 hours, the breadth of expertise at DN18 is vast; luckily, we’re here to help you curate your conference experience. The Data Natives content team have selected six talks that perfectly encapsulate this year’s topic and focus- trust us, these are six presentations you can’t afford to miss!
1. A 21st Century Paradox: Could Tech Be the Answer to Climate Change?
Climate change is one of the greatest concerns of our lifetime- and many are wondering if technology holds the answer to decelerating the impending climate disaster. Dr. Patrick Vetter of Supper und Supper will be presenting one use case which demonstrates the tangible benefits of ecotech: “Wind Turbine Segmentation in Satellite Images Using Deep Learning”. In layman’s terms, Dr. Vetter will be sharing the details of his project to optimise wind turbine placement using deep learning and analysis on “wind energy potential”. Exploring the potential of rapidly accelerating data technologies to curb the rapid acceleration of climate change, Dr. Vetter’s talk is definitely one to watch.
2. Cutting Through Propaganda: Government Policy Priorities in Practice
Any citizen of a democracy knows that there’s usually a huge gulf between the promises made in government officials’ election manifestos and what actually becomes policy. Cutting through the propaganda, is it possible to find a quantitative measure of the government’s priorities (and how they shift) over time? American Enterprise Institute Research Fellow Weifeng Zhong has been working on just such a measure: the Policy Change Index (PCI). Running machine learning algorithms on the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party of China, Zhong has found a way to infer significant shifts in policy direction. The PCI currently spans the past 60+ years of Chinese history- through the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution, and the economic reform program- and can now also make short-term predictions about China’s future policy directions. Zhong will be allowing us to glimpse under the hood of the PCI at Data Natives 2018, as well as sharing some of the more remarkable findings with us.
3. Blockchain: Beyond a Buzzword
Over our four editions of Data Natives, we’ve seen blockchain emerge from a promising but niche sphere into a full-blown game-changing technology. However, blockchain and decentralised computing are still shrouded in hype, and have a long way to go to garner full consumer trust. That’s where Elke Kunde, Solution Architect, Blockchain Technical Focalpoint DACH at IBM Deutschland, comes in. Her talk on “Blockchain in Practice” at Data Natives 2018 aims to demystify blockchain, slash through the hype, and enlighten the audience about how IBM clients are already using decentralised computing in their tech projects. This talk is a must-see for anyone who’s excited by the promise of blockchain, but still unclear on how exactly decentralisation can change the tech game- and their business- forever.
4. Using Machine Learning to Predict (and Hopefully Prevent) Crime
Predictive policing has been a hot topic for many years- and the technical methods behind it have become more sophisticated than ever before. Du Phan, a Data Scientist at Dataiku, will walk DN18 attendees through one particularly sophisticated model, which uses a variety of techniques including PostGIS, spatial mapping, time-series analyses, dimensionality reduction, and machine learning. As well as discussing how to visualise and model the multi-dimensional dataset, Phan will also discuss the ethical principles behind predictive policing- and what we can do to prevent crime rather than predict it.
5. Putting a Price on Personal Data
Data privacy and the price of personal data have been hot topics for years, coming to a boil with events such as the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Even Angela Merkel has declared that putting a price on personal data is “essential to ensure a fair world”- but how do we put a price on data, and how can this be enforced? Jennifer Lyn Morone- the artist who registered herself as a corporation and sold dossiers of her personal data in an art gallery- will discuss her perspective on these issues in a closing keynote for Data Natives which will bring the ethics of data science into focus.
Data Natives will take place on the 22nd and 23rd November at Kuhlhaus Berlin. For tickets and more information, please visit datanatives.io.