This data collection and its companion study, PUBLIC IMAGE OF COURTS, 1977: SPECIAL PUBLICS DATA (ICPSR 7704), were undertaken to explore attitudes toward courts and justice. These surveys sought to measure perceptions of and experiences with local, state, and federal courts as well as general attitudes toward the administration of justice and legal actors. The general objectives of the studies were to (1) determine levels of public knowledge of courts, (2) test reactions to situations that might, or might not, prompt recourse to courts, (3) determine the incidence, nature, and evaluations of court experience, (4) describe and account for evaluations of court performance, (5) indicate attitudes toward legal actors, and (6) indicate reactions to alternative means of dispute resolution. Two samples were drawn: a national sample of the general public and a "special publics" sample of judges, lawyers, and community leaders (ICPSR 7704). The 1,931 respondents in the general public sample were interviewed in person by the National Consumer Field Staff of Yankelovich, Skelly, and White, Inc.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This is a link to the United States Federal Government's Open Data Portal. Here you will find data, tools, and resources to conduct research, develop web and mobile applications, design data visualizations.
Check out the attachment in the metadata detailing all the Opioid Related datasets contained in this portal.
Data.gov is the federal government’s open data site, and aims to make government more open and accountable. Opening government data increases citizen participation in government, creates opportunities for economic development, and informs decision making in both the private and public sectors.
Links included for Center for Disease Control and Prevention both the business website and their Data and Statistics website.
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
License information was derived automatically
Citizen respondents rank how they want to interact with and consume government data. Survey responses are broken down along several dimensions including, Region, Education Level, Gender and Household (HH) Income.
A multidisciplinary repository of public data sets such as the Human Genome and US Census data that can be seamlessly integrated into AWS cloud-based applications. AWS is hosting the public data sets at no charge for the community. Anyone can access these data sets from their Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances and start computing on the data within minutes. Users can also leverage the entire AWS ecosystem and easily collaborate with other AWS users. If you have a public domain or non-proprietary data set that you think is useful and interesting to the AWS community, please submit a request and the AWS team will review your submission and get back to you. Typically the data sets in the repository are between 1 GB to 1 TB in size (based on the Amazon EBS volume limit), but they can work with you to host larger data sets as well. You must have the right to make the data freely available.
Daily utilization metrics for data.lacity.org and geohub.lacity.org. Updated monthly
NOTE: To review the latest plan, make sure to filter the "Report Year" column to the latest year.
Data on public websites maintained by or on behalf of the city agencies.
Homeland Infrastructure Foundation-Level Data (HIFLD) geospatial data sets containing information on DoD Site Locations (Public).
ODC Public Domain Dedication and Licence (PDDL) v1.0http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
A log of dataset alerts open, monitored or resolved on the open data portal. Alerts can include issues as well as deprecation or discontinuation notices.
The largest reported data leakage as of January 2025 was the Cam4 data breach in March 2020, which exposed more than 10 billion data records. The second-largest data breach in history so far, the Yahoo data breach, occurred in 2013. The company initially reported about one billion exposed data records, but after an investigation, the company updated the number, revealing that three billion accounts were affected. The National Public Data Breach was announced in August 2024. The incident became public when personally identifiable information of individuals became available for sale on the dark web. Overall, the security professionals estimate the leakage of nearly three billion personal records. The next significant data leakage was the March 2018 security breach of India's national ID database, Aadhaar, with over 1.1 billion records exposed. This included biometric information such as identification numbers and fingerprint scans, which could be used to open bank accounts and receive financial aid, among other government services.
Cybercrime - the dark side of digitalization As the world continues its journey into the digital age, corporations and governments across the globe have been increasing their reliance on technology to collect, analyze and store personal data. This, in turn, has led to a rise in the number of cyber crimes, ranging from minor breaches to global-scale attacks impacting billions of users – such as in the case of Yahoo. Within the U.S. alone, 1802 cases of data compromise were reported in 2022. This was a marked increase from the 447 cases reported a decade prior. The high price of data protection As of 2022, the average cost of a single data breach across all industries worldwide stood at around 4.35 million U.S. dollars. This was found to be most costly in the healthcare sector, with each leak reported to have cost the affected party a hefty 10.1 million U.S. dollars. The financial segment followed closely behind. Here, each breach resulted in a loss of approximately 6 million U.S. dollars - 1.5 million more than the global average.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
The open data portal catalogue is a downloadable dataset containing some key metadata for the general datasets available on the Government of Canada's Open Data portal. Resource 1 is generated using the ckanapi tool (external link) Resources 2 - 8 are generated using the Flatterer (external link) utility. ###Description of resources: 1. Dataset is a JSON Lines (external link) file where the metadata of each Dataset/Open Information Record is one line of JSON. The file is compressed with GZip. The file is heavily nested and recommended for users familiar with working with nested JSON. 2. Catalogue is a XLSX workbook where the nested metadata of each Dataset/Open Information Record is flattened into worksheets for each type of metadata. 3. datasets metadata contains metadata at the dataset
level. This is also referred to as the package
in some CKAN documentation. This is the main
table/worksheet in the SQLite database and XLSX output. 4. Resources Metadata contains the metadata for the resources contained within each dataset. 5. resource views metadata contains the metadata for the views applied to each resource, if a resource has a view configured. 6. datastore fields metadata contains the DataStore information for CSV datasets that have been loaded into the DataStore. This information is displayed in the Data Dictionary for DataStore enabled CSVs. 7. Data Package Fields contains a description of the fields available in each of the tables within the Catalogue, as well as the count of the number of records each table contains. 8. data package entity relation diagram Displays the title and format for column, in each table in the Data Package in the form of a ERD Diagram. The Data Package resource offers a text based version. 9. SQLite Database is a .db
database, similar in structure to Catalogue. This can be queried with database or analytical software tools for doing analysis.
The resource provides a public inventory of archaeological sites in Iowa.
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Google Patents Public Data, provided by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services, is a worldwide bibliographic and US full-text dataset of patent publications. Patent information accessibility is critical for examining new patents, informing public policy decisions, managing corporate investment in intellectual property, and promoting future scientific innovation. The growing number of available patent data sources means researchers often spend more time downloading, parsing, loading, syncing and managing local databases than conducting analysis. With these new datasets, researchers and companies can access the data they need from multiple sources in one place, thus spending more time on analysis than data preparation.
The Google Patents Public Data dataset contains a collection of publicly accessible, connected database tables for empirical analysis of the international patent system.
Data Origin: https://bigquery.cloud.google.com/dataset/patents-public-data:patents
For more info, see the documentation at https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-user-experience-report/
“Google Patents Public Data” by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services and Google is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Banner photo by Helloquence on Unsplash
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset is about companies in the United States. It has 4,752 rows. It features 17 columns including sector, industry, website, and city.
Download or connect to open data endpoints Get data Download data as spreadsheet, kml, shapefile or connect to service APIs to stay up to date. Create maps Create maps, analyse and discover trends. Watch video instructions. Code apps Make applications with our data.ArGIS API for Javascript. Categories City Council Assets, amenities and public space Council services and facilities Culture, leisure and sport Economy and business Environment and climate Planning Transport and access View all Terms Unless otherwise stated, data products available from the data hub are published under Creative Commons licences. For terms of use and more information see site Disclaimer. Contact If you have a question, comments, or requests for interactive maps and data, we would love to hear from you. Council business For information on rates, development applications, strategies, reports and other council business, see the City of Sydney's main website.
Salutary Data is a boutique, B2B contact and company data provider that's committed to delivering high quality data for sales intelligence, lead generation, marketing, recruiting / HR, identity resolution, and ML / AI. Our database currently consists of 148MM+ highly curated B2B Contacts ( US only), along with over 4M+ companies, and is updated regularly to ensure we have the most up-to-date information.
We can enrich your in-house data ( CRM Enrichment, Lead Enrichment, etc.) and provide you with a custom dataset ( such as a lead list) tailored to your target audience specifications and data use-case. We also support large-scale data licensing to software providers and agencies that intend to redistribute our data to their customers and end-users.
What makes Salutary unique? - We offer our clients a truly unique, one-stop aggregation of the best-of-breed quality data sources. Our supplier network consists of numerous, established high quality suppliers that are rigorously vetted. - We leverage third party verification vendors to ensure phone numbers and emails are accurate and connect to the right person. Additionally, we deploy automated and manual verification techniques to ensure we have the latest job information for contacts. - We're reasonably priced and easy to work with.
Products: API Suite Web UI Full and Custom Data Feeds
Services: Data Enrichment - We assess the fill rate gaps and profile your customer file for the purpose of appending fields, updating information, and/or rendering net new “look alike” prospects for your campaigns. ABM Match & Append - Send us your domain or other company related files, and we’ll match your Account Based Marketing targets and provide you with B2B contacts to campaign. Optionally throw in your suppression file to avoid any redundant records. Verification (“Cleaning/Hygiene”) Services - Address the 2% per month aging issue on contact records! We will identify duplicate records, contacts no longer at the company, rid your email hard bounces, and update/replace titles or phones. This is right up our alley and levers our existing internal and external processes and systems.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This dataset includes information about state agencies publishing data on the CT Open Data Portal, including number of datasets, maps, external datasets (href), federated datasets (federated href), and data stories. It also includes a summary of the freshness of the data and the completeness of the metadata by agency.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
This dataset provides information about access to public assets on the CT Open Data Portal by day. Types of access include:
-Grid view -Primer page view -Download -API read -Story page view -Visualization page view
It includes assets that meet the following criteria:
-Published on the data.ct.gov domain -Public -Official (ie published by a registered user) -Not a derived view
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The corpus PaWaC was designed and developed by the University of Pisa within the Tuscan regional project named SEMPLICE (SEMantic Instruments for PubLIc Administrators and CitizEns) involving several local SMEs and the University of Pisa (http://www.progettosemplice.it/). It is composed by 4172 documents, corresponding to 3.043.842 sentences and 25.218.385 tokens. The corpus gathers a wide typology of administrative acts (resolutions, circular letters, etc.) representative of the Public Administration Italian language and is freely available for research purposes. The corpus is available in two different versions: 147 MB of raw text, and 648 MB of automatically annotated text (morpho-syntactic and lemma information) in the CONLL format.
Resp: CoLing Lab - Laboratorio di Linguistica Computazionale - http://colinglab.humnet.unipi.it/; The corpus was collected by crawling the web sites of 277 Tuscan municipalities.
U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
License information was derived automatically
Data Description: This data set provides all public datasets, links, documents and community created filters hosted on the City of Cincinnati's Open Data Portal.
Data Creation: This data set is maintained by the City of Cincinnati's Open Data host, Socrata.
Data Created By: Socrata
Refresh Frequency: Daily
Data Dictionary: A data dictionary providing definitions of columns and attributes is available as an attachment to this data set.
Processing: The City of Cincinnati is committed to providing the most granular and accurate data possible. In that pursuit the Office of Performance and Data Analytics facilitates standard processing to most raw data prior to publication. Processing includes but is not limited: address verification, geocoding, decoding attributes, and addition of administrative areas (i.e. Census, neighborhoods, police districts, etc.).
Data Usage: For directions on downloading and using open data please visit our How-to Guide: https://data.cincinnati-oh.gov/dataset/Open-Data-How-To-Guide/gdr9-g3ad
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Citizen respondents rank what's most important on a government Open Data site. Survey responses are broken down along several dimensions including, Region, Education Level, Gender and Household (HH) Income.
This data collection and its companion study, PUBLIC IMAGE OF COURTS, 1977: SPECIAL PUBLICS DATA (ICPSR 7704), were undertaken to explore attitudes toward courts and justice. These surveys sought to measure perceptions of and experiences with local, state, and federal courts as well as general attitudes toward the administration of justice and legal actors. The general objectives of the studies were to (1) determine levels of public knowledge of courts, (2) test reactions to situations that might, or might not, prompt recourse to courts, (3) determine the incidence, nature, and evaluations of court experience, (4) describe and account for evaluations of court performance, (5) indicate attitudes toward legal actors, and (6) indicate reactions to alternative means of dispute resolution. Two samples were drawn: a national sample of the general public and a "special publics" sample of judges, lawyers, and community leaders (ICPSR 7704). The 1,931 respondents in the general public sample were interviewed in person by the National Consumer Field Staff of Yankelovich, Skelly, and White, Inc.