Symposium discusses data ownership in agriculture
MELFORT, Sask. — Primary production agriculture is changing rapidly due to major developments in digital “smart” technology. Farmers use and share information from their “smart” devices on everything from weather and soil data to seed, fertilizer, and chemical recommendations.
The Canadian Centre for the Study of Cooperatives (CCSC) at the University of Saskatchewan (USask), the BC Co-op Association, and the Alberta Community and Co-op Association are hosting a session on agricultural data.
The symposium will examine who owns and benefits from the big ag data that is being collected, ways of addressing privacy and data sharing concerns, and alternative policies and organizational models that can help create fair data ownership.
Dr. Murray Fulton, an agricultural economist and professor in the Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy at USask, said the symposium is an opportunity to start the conversation.