AWS Neptune going GA: The good, the bad, and the ugly for graph database users and vendors
It's official: AWS has a production-ready graph database. What features are included today, and what will be included in the near future, what use cases are targeted, and what does AWS Neptune's release mean for users and graph database vendors?
Read More →GDPR in real life: Transparency, innovation, and adoption across borders and organizations
Part two: Auditing data on premise and in the cloud, spurring innovation in machine learning and interpretable AI, and influencing organizations, consumers, and legislation all over the world, GDPR is here to stay.
Read More →Human in the loop: Machine learning and AI for the people
HITL is a mix and match approach that may help make ML both more efficient and approachable.
Read More →GDPR in real life: Fear, uncertainty, and doubt
Part one: Why are most organizations still not ready for GDPR? And what are the implications and mechanisms of applying GDPR provisions for companies, individuals, and regulators?
Read More →New releases, algorithms, and visualization. The Year of the Graph Newsletter Vol. 2, May 2018
New releases, algorithms, and visualization. April has been an interesting month in the graph database world. We saw 2 minor and one major graph database versions come out, namely GraphDB 8.5, Neo4j 3.4 and DSE Graph 6.0. Each of these brings interesting new features and reshapes the landscape a little bit. We saw more graphs […]
Read More →DataStax Enterprise Graph 6.0: what’s new, and what’s coming?
DataStax Enterprise just released version 6.0, a major upgrade. We take an insider tour with Jonathan Lacefield, Senior Director of Product Management with DataStax, focusing on DSE Graph. Even though news on the new DSE release have been out for a while, one of the principles to go by in the tech world is “never […]
Read More →Controversy, thy name is Europe: Open credit scores, data-driven counter-forensics, and the regulation debate
Europe's biggest digital culture festival raises questions beyond the use of data.
Read More →The road to automation, the joy of work, and the ‘Jen problem’
How do we get to the point where technology is the infrastructure firms run on, and what happens when we do?
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