UK government finally launches National Data Strategy This article is sponsored by:
The National Data Strategy has been in the pipeline for years and will see a £2.6m project to address barriers to data sharing.
The National Data Strategy has been in the pipeline for years and will see a £2.6m project to address barriers to data sharing.
The UK government ignored its own guidance and refused external help, resulting in an A level algorithm disaster that disproportionately impacted students from disadvantaged backgrounds. But what exactly went wrong and what are the implications?
A new report by think tank Institute for Public Policy Research highlights the dangers of leaving big tech unchecked in the coming years, as it doubles down on the data economy.
The New Radicals reckon it's time to rip up the UK political inertia and bring in some Silicon Valley mindsets. Here we go again....
Back in 2018 it was revealed that data policy would be taken away from the Cabinet Office and given to DCMS. It’s now going back to the centre of government.
Andrew Morris, Director of Health Data Research UK, says that COVID-19 has proven that the UK needs a ‘data-as-infrastructure’ approach.
Soaring unemployment is another side effect of the COVID-19 crisis and one that's being met head on in New Mexico with a tech-enabled agile response.
Rhode Island in the US and New South Wales in Australia have both tapped into cloud tech to provide effective contact tracking and emergency response communications to tackle their respective COVID-19 realities.
According to the latest data from Tussell, each of the Big 4 consulting firms saw revenue grow from government in 2019. Meanwhile, outsourcing spend continues to decline.
HMRC strategy and innovation director describes how cloud adoption and reskilling played a vital role in the pandemic