The data sphere we live in: the interconnected data system

Fecha de la noticia: 04-05-2023

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As technology and connectivity have advanced in recent years, we have entered a new era in which data never sleeps and the amount of data circulating is greater than ever. Today, we could say that we live enclosed in a sphere surrounded by data and this has made us more and more dependent on it. On the other hand, we have also gradually become both producers and collectors of data.

The term datasphere has historically been used to define the set of all the information existing in digital spaces, also including other related concepts such as data flows and the platforms involved. But this concept has been developing and gaining more and more relevance in parallel with the growing weight of data in our society today, becoming an important concept in defining the future of the relationship between technology and society.

In the early days of the digital era we could consider that we lived in our own data bubbles that we fed little by little throughout our lives until we ended up totally immersed in the data of the online world, where the distinction between the real and the virtual is increasingly irrelevant. Today we live in a society that is interconnected through data and also through algorithms that link us and establish relationships between us. All that data we share more or less consciously no longer affects only ourselves as individuals, but can also have its effect on the rest of society, even in sometimes totally unpredictable ways - like a digital version of the butterfly effect.

Governance models that are based on working with data and its relationship to people, as if it were simply isolated instances that we can work with individually, will therefore no longer serve us well in this new environment.

The need for a systems-based approach to data

Today, that relatively simple concept of the data sphere has evolved into a complete, highly interconnected and complex digital ecosystem - made up of a wide range of data and technologies - that we inhabit and that affects the way we live our lives. It is a system in which data has value only in the context of its relationship with other data, with people and with the rules that govern those relationships.

Effective management of this new ecosystem will therefore require a better understanding of how the different components of the datasphere relate to each other, how data flows through these components, and what the appropriate rules will be needed to make this interconnected system work.

Data as an active component of the system

In a systems-based approach, data is considered as an active component within the ecosystem. This means that data is no longer just static information, but also has the capacity to influence the functioning of the ecosystem itself and will therefore be an additional component to be considered for the effective management of the ecosystem.

For example, data can be used to fine-tune the functioning of algorithms, improving the accuracy and efficiency of artificial intelligence and machine learning systems. Similarly, it could also be used to adjust the way decisions are made and policies implemented in different sectors, such as healthcare, education and security.

The data sphere and the evolution of data governance

It will therefore be necessary to explore new collective data governance frameworks that consider all elements of the ecosystem in their design, controlling how information is accessed, used and protected across the data sphere.

This could ensure that data is used securely, ethically and responsibly for the whole ecosystem and not just in individual or isolated cases. For example, some of the new data governance tools that have been experimented with for some time now and can help us to manage the data sphere collectively are data commons or digital data assets, data trusts, data cooperatives, data collaboratives or data collaborations, among others.

The future of the data sphere

The data sphere will continue to grow and evolve in the coming years, driven once again by new technological advances and the increasing connectivity and ubiquity of systems. It will be important for governments and organisations to keep abreast of these changes and adapt their data governance and management strategies accordingly through robust regulatory frameworks, accompanied by ethical guidelines and responsible practices that ensure that the benefits that data exploitation promises us can finally be realised while minimising risks.

In order to adequately address these challenges, and thus harness the full potential of the data sphere for positive change and for the common good, it will be essential to move away from thinking of data as something we can treat in isolation and to adopt a systems-based approach that recognises the interconnected nature of data and its impact on society as a whole.

Today, we could consider data spaces, which the European Commission has been developing for some time now as a key part of its new data strategy, as precisely a logical evolution of the data sphere concept adapted to the particular needs of our time and acting on all components of the ecosystem simultaneously: technical, functional, operational, legal and business.


Content prepared by Carlos Iglesias, Open data Researcher and consultant, World Wide Web Foundation.

The contents and views reflected in this publication are the sole responsibility of the author.