Big data is, in the words of the authors, a paradigm shift in statistical analysis. The rationale is that immense quantitative changes enable qualitative changes; so has the significant increase in the extent of processable digital data resulted in a change of state. The three major shifts characterizing the big data phenomenon are:
- the shift from small sample sets augmented through extrapolation to big amounts of information sourced from the entire population;
- the shift from exactitude to messiness; and - probably the most important one -
- the shift from causality to correlation.
The importance of data had already been recognized in logic some decades ago when inductive reasoning was coined as opposed to the traditional deductive reasoning school. Though, due to the abundance of data and data-crunching technologies, data has recently become even more valuable and is often prioritized over theoretical reasoning. In the light of the capabilities brought about by big data technologies, we can now contemptuously describe traditional statistical analysis methods as inadequate and stochastic hypothesis-driven trial and error! As big data technologies mature, further aspects of the phenomenon such as the secondary usages (also called the option values) of data are revealed and taken into account in high-end business models and vision statements of the pioneer information management firms.
As any other emerging technology, big data also has its downsides. The fact that data anonymization in a big data world is nothing but a blatant myth poses a serious threat to our privacy. It also questions the decency and legitimacy of using data for commercial and even research purposes. Eventually, we will face unprecedented cases as this: imagine a real-life situation where the probability of committing a serious crime by a suspect at a specific moment according to statistical analysis of his/her behavior is so huge that could serve as a fairly good evidence for the police for seizing him/her. At that stage, predictions could be so accurate that it would no longer be prudent to postpone preventive measures until human lives are lost and irreversible damages are perpetrated by the statistically-identified potential criminal.
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