02190nam 2200373 450 991063769890332120230830145010.0(CKB)5720000000119634(NjHacI)995720000000119634(EXLCZ)99572000000011963420230830d2022 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDE'22 proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Data Economy : December 9, 2022, Rome, Italy /Nikos Laoutaris, Marco MelliaNew York, New York :Association for Computing Machinery,2022.1 online resource (70 pages) illustrations1-4503-9923-1 Data-driven decision making powered by Machine Learning (ML) algorithms is changing how the society and the economy work and is having a profound positive impact on our daily life. With the exception of very large companies that have both the data and the skills to develop powerful ML-driven services, the large majority of provably possible ML services, from e-health, to transportation and predictive maintenance, to name just a few, still remain at the idea or prototype level for the simple reason that data, the skills to manipulate them, and the business models to bring them to market, seldom co-exist under the same roof. Data must somehow meet with the ML and business skills that can unleash its full power for the society and economy. This has given rise to a highly dynamic sector around the Data Economy, involving Data Providers/Controllers, data Intermediaries, often-times in the form of Data Marketplaces or Personal Information Management Systems for end-users to control and even monetise their personal data.Big dataCongressesPersonal information managementCongressesBig dataPersonal information management005.7Laoutaris Nikos1421718Mellia MarcoNjHacINjHaclBOOK9910637698903321DE'223543810UNINA