-
…I’m actually super excited about Cohack.
-
Congrats on winning!
-
Thank you. Thank you. It really helped with UC Berkeley. The School of Public Health there is tasked with how to reopen the campus.
-
We did work with them three years ago. They have a new Dean now, and so these past two weeks it’s been nonstop meetings, trying to figure out how we can help. There’s a bunch of really good stuff there.
-
Berkeley really wants to work with Taiwan. They think that there’s this amazing cohort in Taiwan that they would love to be able to study.
-
Cohort of civic technologists?
-
You got it.
-
But not cohort of confirmed…
-
People. People’s data. Both.
-
…cases? Both, including confirmed cases?
-
Yeah. Out of Cohack came two amazing things. First is we met Dr. Ho at Sinica. She has been a huge help.
-
I know.
-
The new stuff we’re doing with our app now relates to nutrition, so she was showing us from age 7 to age 12 the youth in Taiwan already have the biomarkers for prediabetes. It was blowing my mind.
-
We’re doing all kinds of cool stuff to combine nutrition.
-
That’s awesome. When we’re in the jury panel we see Dr. Ho’s name. I’m like, “Wait, did you hire her?”
-
(laughter)
-
I can’t afford her.
-
(laughter)
-
That’s right. She’s the authority of these matters.
-
She’s so awesome. This is recorded. It will come out the wrong way, but she reminds so much of my mom.
-
From the youngest of age my mom always told me about the benefits of nutrition. “Take care of your health. Your health is the most important thing.”
-
We originally wanted her help with Cohack, but then as we talked the stuff that Casey and I are interested in, both physical health, mental health, before we spoke about the social media…
-
Precision public health.
-
You got it. That’s what she wants to do. She doesn’t know software. I’m like, “OK, we know software. We don’t know health and nutrition.”
-
It’s perfectly complementary.
-
We’ve been meeting with her at least once a week since then.
-
Wow. She’s like your real mentor now?
-
She’s a full-on mentor. She’s awesome. She’s like, “Look at these figures.” She’s like, “I’m not a medical person. I’m public health, but look at these numbers.”
-
She’s like, “If I saw these numbers I couldn’t sleep at night. What are we doing?”
-
The backdrop of all of this is that because of Cohack we got Dr. Ho. UC Berkeley is really excited, “How do we do US-Taiwan study of public health?” so today, mainly, I want to ask for your help navigating.
-
There’s three things. When we first showed you the app that we were working on you said, “Hey, maybe do it Web-based.”
-
That’s right, because at that point you were not using many of the cell phone sensors.
-
That’s right. We’re adding more and more of those cell phone sensors – health, nutrition, location, all this kind of stuff. We have a practical problem in that Apple and Google block anybody that’s not an institution or university.
-
If you do a Web app, no such…?
-
Correct, but there’s enough still in our app that we need to be mobile. What we’re trying to do now is essentially, “I’m in this location. Can I show you places that have nutritious food, places you can exercise?”
-
That’s like the mask map. Many of them are Web apps.
-
This is interesting. I will push the team to look into that direction again.
-
Go ahead. I don’t mean to interrupt you.
-
No, this is interesting. We’ll definitely look at that again.
-
The one thing that we are trying to do is to nudge people through notifications, but then I don’t know. It feels like people have almost managed to crack progressive Web apps to do notifications. We’ll bring this back.
-
What I would love your help on is, first, to know are there any institutions that you feel in Taiwan – and we can think about this very creatively. It doesn’t need to be CDC, for example – that we can partner to work on this neighborhood public health.
-
In my mind I’ve been crazy inspired by SpaceX and NASA, how you have private and public together. It’s so inspiring.
-
What Dr. Ho was showing us was all of this data that CDC is releasing, but they’re mainly releasing it as PDFs. She’s like, “If you just put this into an app and it became location based…”
-
Aware of that.
-
I would be curious, is there any institutions that you felt we could talk to?
-
Obviously, the whole Cohack organizers.
-
That’s the purpose of it, right?
-
The Cohack organizers. Cohack is run by the Board of Science and Technology. The main institution that supports them is the III.
-
That’s why they reached out, then? I’m meeting with them next week.
-
That’s right. You can quote me on it.
-
[laughs] Good.
-
You can quote me in saying that there should be more business-to-government relationships when it comes to counter-coronavirus efforts.
-
Just as we donated a lot of medical mask to international humanitarian aid, we should also dedicated in a open source manner all our solutions to the epidemic, including the ones that Taiwan have not deployed because of the lack of community spread stage, but we should, nevertheless, support other jurisdictions in doing that.
-
III is focused on the digital transformation of the government and the way the government works. If they can help the business community, including medical mask makers, to get this “Taiwan Can Help” brought out to everybody, then every digital governance tool should be part of this so-called national team on the “Taiwan Can Help” club.
-
Who else is in this club? You have…
-
We’ve got the medical mask manufacturer. They are now producing a micro-factory that can churn out two million medical masks a day, 24 hours a day. The government, the other economy has to only provide the plots of land, electricity, and water.
-
Really?
-
Yes, so that’s something.
-
That’s amazing.
-
Once you churn out those masks you have to distribute it evenly and have the social innovation that incentivize people to start building the habit of wearing mask, which is far from universal. At which point things like autonomy begin to play a part because it’s essentially a habit-forming tool.
-
That’s what we’re trying to do.
-
You can quote me on that.
-
I love this.
-
III could help you bring this through.
-
I brought my notes. The other thing is the NDF has an angel fund. They have three different funds.
-
I’m aware of that.
-
We’re in the final stages of the process. Our application was accepted.
-
Yay.
-
Yes. That would be an investment. What I would also like, how can I find if are there government projects that need infrastructure?
-
We want to build open infrastructure. That’s how we see what we’re doing. With UC Berkeley they’re connecting us now to…Public health offices in the US is county-based.
-
I’m aware of that.
-
They’re connecting us, and we’re trying to figure out how do we build, let’s call it, next-generation public health infrastructure. What I’m curious of is does Taiwan have any of that kind of thing?
-
Yes, but it boils down to the NHI and pre-NHI. Everything that’s covered by the National Health insurance is…
-
Would they also cover public health? Is that under the same umbrella?
-
If it’s chronic disease management, that is both Health Promotion Administration, HPA, and also NHI, because it uses insurance money, so that’s naturally NHI.
-
HPA, Health Prevention.
-
HPA is trying not to use NHI money by preventing you from getting sick in the first place.
-
Intervention and prevention?
-
That’s right, exactly.
-
Who does the prevention?
-
Prevention is the HPA.
-
HPA?
-
The Health Promotion Administration.
-
Who are they under?
-
Both are under the MOHW, the Ministry of Health and Welfare.
-
Do they ever give government contracts to private companies?
-
Yes, of course. They contracted out some websites and apps. They even get selected to the second round of Presidential Hackathon, which means that you can join the…
-
Which means we can collaborate with them, right?
-
Exactly. They have a very interesting topic that works with the weather bureau.
-
Really?
-
Yeah. The weather bureau partnership is quite surprising, because you wouldn’t think that it has anything to do with public health, but then they work on this kind of heat damage prevention.
-
The idea is that it can do a precision notification so that the people who anticipate that there is going to be a heat wave or something, they can change their habits, like maybe get a sun umbrella or something, so that they don’t end up using NHI money.
-
Focus on the prevention, right?
-
That’s right. They are team 189. That’s both the Central Weather Bureau and a promotion agency, but you mostly want to talk to the HPA part of it.
-
Of course, there’s nothing that says your application cannot connect to the Central Weather Bureau data. They do provide quite some good data when it comes to, for example, respiratory diseases, like if air pollution there was high probably you should stay indoors, or something like that, or wear a mask.
-
This is awesome. This is really, really good.
-
You can volunteer and maybe join the team.
-
If we wanted to connect US and Taiwan…we can be even more specific. Let’s say Berkeley and…
-
And the research institution.
-
Academia Sinica, right?
-
Exactly.
-
How would you go about doing that?
-
Talk to Professor Ho. [laughs]
-
She’ll know?
-
Yeah, because we in the administration, we have no control over Academia Sinica. The Sinica is under the President’s office, so they are not part of the Minister of Science, Education, or anything, which means we can’t really touch Academia Sinica.
-
It helps, of course, that our previous Vice President is a academician, and the top authority on epidemiology.
-
You actually have a connection there, through Dr. Ho.
-
We do now, yes. She would be good to help navigate this one?
-
Very much so.
-
Perfect, because so many people are looking to the public health people to figure out how to open things up, but then the public health people are like, “We don’t have the data to open it up.”
-
The US right now is riots and rockets. It’s complete chaos. We’re trying to export some of the good stuff that Taiwan did over there.
-
I see that.
-
That’s great. The new dean, Michael Lu is his name. He’s Taiwanese. The School of Public Health. There’s such roots between Berkeley and…
-
Natural connections.
-
Yes. How should we think of, say, academia or hospitals? NTU, either as a hospital or as a university, versus Sinica? How does the government look at these in terms of public health?
-
Sinica does research, so Sinica doesn’t quite do application-level stuff. More science, less technology. NTUH is science and technology.
-
The more industrial, the less applicable is Academia Sinica, but Academia Sinica is also very happy to work with the people who want to…for example, when they’re working on this rapid testing stuff, then they still need to partner with the industry.
-
For NTUH they have this natural ecosystem of makers that can help translate any idea into application, into industry. Our previous Minister of Science and Technology is famous for that.
-
This is so good. Those are all my questions related to autonomy, navigating how to connect US and Taiwan. Do you have any other things that are on your mind about that?
-
That’s everything we talked about.
-
This gentleman with a ice stick is a aforementioned foreign service delegate to our office…
-
Nice to meet you.
-
…and is, in fact, in charge of Cohack. Joel, meet our Cohack winner. [laughs]
-
Wow. Really? Where are you from?
-
California.
-
They’re looking to build institutional collaboration between UC Berkeley – the dean is Taiwanese – and with local research institutions, because III runs the Cohack. They’re going to meet with III, so it’s a great bridge as a part of the U.S.-Taiwan… Sorry, I should say Taiwan-U.S. joint statement here…
-
(laughter)
-
…for coronavirus prevention, this is one of the flagship cases where the III is already looking to export the medical mask and the digital governance know-hows. Having someone who speak both culture is great as our digital ambassador.
-
We want to export software.
-
That’s right.
-
Because the US really needs different software. The hardware’s OK, people are still good, but you have to reload the software.
-
(laughter)
-
Governance software.
-
It’s really bad. It’s falling apart.
-
Anyway, this is so that you can make acquaintances.
-
Yeah, this is so cool.
-
It’s fine. It’s fine.
-
I’ll keep your attention now.
-
Please.
-
This is Joel.
-
Joel? Sean. This is Casey.
-
Nice to meet you.
-
Thank you.
-
That’s pretty much it? Anything from you?
-
No. Did you want to ask about the…?
-
I have another set of questions, but those are all the…
-
Set B?
-
This is plan B questions.
-
We have 14 minutes. Go for it.
-
This guy, Daniel Schmachtenberger, I’ve never heard of him before. Casey found the podcast, “The Portal,” the podcast that I’m a big fan of. This guy is super, super interesting.
-
We have both been involved with RadicalxChange and looking for tools besides private property, capitalism, what comes next. This Daniel Schmachtenberger guy has all of these fascinating ideas around non-rivalrous stuff.
-
Yeah. Kanban.
-
Are you aware of any other likeminded efforts or people in Taiwan that we can connect with, that we can try some of these ideas?
-
A lot.
-
(laughter)
-
Pretty much half the people who come to my office are.
-
I’ll look at your transcripts, then find people, and then…
-
Seriously, like Rufus Pollock, obviously. He created the Open Knowledge Foundation. That’s the Open Data Index. Author of the book “The Open Revolution,” probably think along extremely similar lines. His team, most of them are in Taiwan now.
-
Really?
-
If you go to Taiwan around this month you don’t want to go back anywhere. Many of them are trapped in the bubble.
-
(laughter)
-
It’s a good bubble to be trapped in.
-
It’s a good bubble.
-
There’s three people that work for Peter Schwabe, one of our advisors, in Amsterdam. They’re postdocs. They happened to be stuck at Academic Sinica, and now they’re stuck for a year.
-
That’s right. There’s Ray Chan and Joe Hsueh.
-
Joe?
-
They were there when Otto Scharmer of the Theory U, they organized this meeting with this Theory U thinker.
-
Theory U it’s called?
-
Theory U. U as in the letter.
-
There’s many things. Looking at my transcripts…
-
That’s what I’ve got to do.
-
…most thinkers here share very similar lines of thought. I’m this natural attractor.
-
Can you share a little bit about the history of g0v? I read it through a Westerners lens, but I’m curious what is it doing now? How did it come about?
-
I wrote, along with many g0v contributors, something called “The First Year of g0v.”
-
Is there an English version of this?
-
Of course. If you google for First Year of g0v, with a zero in it, you will find it. There’s also Japanese version. That goes through all the whys, what, and whos. If you have any follow-up questions it’s easier if you first read this.
-
Are there other efforts like this that I should be aware of here in Taiwan, or is this the main you think that’s really…?
-
There’s many ones like this, but g0v is particularly good because in g0v hackathons most of the other movements will show of to recruit. The next large one is the g0v summit 2020. That’s in Tainan.
-
When is this?
-
It’s December 3 to 6th.
-
Good, we still have time.
-
Tainan, the cultural and food capital of Taiwan.
-
Tainan is the best weather.
-
The best food.
-
The best food.
-
Best culture.
-
I had Niurou Tang for breakfast. It’s like heaven. It was unbelievable.
-
Unbelievable. I totally agree. I believe that.
-
(laughter)
-
It’s so good.
-
It’s very, very believable to me.
-
It was the most amazing. I am like…My friend, he says, “We’re going to go get beef soup for breakfast.” I’m like, “For breakfast? Seriously?” It was 6:00 AM.
-
He’s like, “Get out of bed. It’s going to be gone by 7:00 if you don’t go.” [laughs]
-
This is Scott. It’s so funny.
-
Until next time.
-
Thank you.
-
Thanks again for everything.
-
Feel free to quote me when you talk to the III.
-
Really appreciate it.
-
I think they’ll be very interested.
-
Good. This is my first time here.
-
That’s right.
-
I like this.
-
Much better than the administration building.
-
For sure.
-
This is a park.
-
When did that wall come down?
-
I’m sorry?
-
The big wall.
-
Three weeks ago.
-
Thank you.