SIIA Releases White Paper, Policy Guide for Data-Driven Innovation
On Monday, SIIA released a white paper that provides an in-depth look at the benefits of Data-driven Innovation, along with a detailed public policy roadmap. SIIA crafted the white paper to provide guidance to help policymakers understand and enable the economic and social value of data-driven innovation, urging them to proceed cautiously and avoid policies that seek to curb the use of data, as they could stifle this nascent technological and economic revolution before it can truly take hold.
Data collection and use is at crossroads, and decisions by policymakers could have an enormous impact on American innovation, jobs and economic growth. It is essential for policymakers to recognize that data-driven innovation presents an economic growth engine that is revolutionizing our lives and will create 1.9 million U.S. jobs by 2015. With this paper, we’ve taken a comprehensive look at the issue — providing significant analysis of where the opportunities lie with data and what needs to be done to unlock its full potential. Our goal is help government and industry work together to enable the transformative power of data-driven innovation, and to avoid strict regulations that will stifle innovation and economic opportunity.
The full white paper is available here. Read more on SIIA’s Digital Discourse Blog or recent coverage by the Washington Post.
SIIA Responds to RFI on Acquisition Provisions in Cybersecurity Executive Order
Earlier this week, SIIA submitted comments in response to the GSA and DOD solicitation for input on Improving Critical Infrastructure Protection. In our comments, SIIA expresses support for the overall goals of the Administration in developing a cybersecurity framework that improves our ability to protect government information and critical infrastructure from cyber-attacks, but raises significant concerns regarding the potential effects of its implementation as proposed. Specifically, SIIA highlighted questions and concerns about the broad scope of the proposal, that it may conflict with sector-specific guidance and urges the Administration to avoid establishing a new, overly prescriptive supply chain or software assurance scheme that would establish the Government as a leader in the process of developing technology or that would create a U.S.-centric standard. Read more on SIIA’s Digital Discourse Blog.
David LeDuc is Senior Director, Public Policy at SIIA. He focuses on e-commerce, privacy, cyber security, cloud computing, open standards, e-government and information policy. Follow the SIIA public policy team on Twitter at @SIIAPubPolicy.