Accessing FDA datasets used to be a slog. Now it's easier, due to an innovative new OpenData initiative.
Data
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation's Data-Driven Innovation Project explores the rapid advancements happening in the digital economy as well as the inventive use of data for good. The promise of bigger and better data is a future of greater opportunity and growth. The Foundation is conducting research activities and a series of events around the country in order to highlight this potential.
We encourage you to read the blog posts and research reports here to gain a full understanding of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation's work on data-driven innovation.
Be sure to read our in-depth report, The Future of Data-Driven Innovation.
Data-driven research and innovation is helping improve clinical trials, and by consequence, human life
There’s a clear appetite by fans and teams for more data, and it can only lead to a greater understanding of the sports we love.
Big Data is just a tool—it can be used for good or ill. Big Data itself is not the enemy.
The human body is a data-making machine. From our genetic code to our eating and sleeping habits, everything about us generates troves of information.
A recent paper argues that it's possible to strip personal information from data, thus preserving data quality and protecting individual privacy.
There is sometimes an unwarranted concern that information produced by the Internet of Things is reducing us to sets of 1s and 0s. The simple truth is data doesn’t work that way.
Targeting readers through Big Data is increasingly giving media outlets a way back to profitably compete in a dynamic, digital world.
Better data collection and use is already disrupting transportation in a number of ways.
As millennials flood urban areas, cities, long plagued by automotive traffic








