Re: The DATA Act, Department of the Treasury, and Machine Learning Technologies

All,

I have zero tolerance for "embrace, extend and extinguish" commercial 
tactics when applied to the Rule of Law.  Maybe it's just me.  These
apps may be helpful.

1) The links Adam gives below to the DATA Act include an XML format
which is an intermediate form to the US Code.  The validation is by DTD.
The entire (enacted) US Code is on line, with the Schema in an XSD file.
Validation works, just not exactly so in practice, out of the box.

http://www.rustprivacy.org/faca/usc/

2) The DATA Act refers to the use of International Standards like ISO. Semantic
Web Technologies, like the US Constitution are not a suicide pact. A coding system
 which enforces isolationism by exclusion is simply an inadequate coding system.
There is no simCity where unfortunates are murdered and there is no simTLD where the use
 of Chemical Weapons is allowed. (sorry Gamers).

http://www.rustprivacy.org/faca/simTLD/

--Gannon

________________________________
 From: Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski@hotmail.com>
To: Hudson Hollister <hudson.hollister@gmail.com> 
Cc: "public-egovernance@w3.org" <public-egovernance@w3.org> 
Sent: Saturday, September 14, 2013 2:09 PM
Subject: Re: The DATA Act, Department of the Treasury, and Machine Learning Technologies
 


<snip />

 
The DATA Act is available online (http://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/2061/ and http://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/senate-bill/994/).  We can discuss whether the DATA Act includes or should include the Department of the Treasury funding research and development into various metadata models, models of programs, expenditures, expenses, articles, documents, reports and other data, e.g. NAICS.
 
 
 
Kind regards,
 
Adam Sobieski

Received on Sunday, 15 September 2013 15:16:09 UTC