Data Science and Business Information gathering are sometimes, erroneously, used as interchangeable terms. Both Data Science and Business Information gathering provide a great deal of added capabilities and benefits to your company, even though they are different.
A few years ago Business Information, also known as BI, was the king of information used to differentiate your company from your competitors. BI was gathered by sophisticated software that investigated a company's databases and pulled out relevant information and KPIs that were used to make management and director level decisions.
However Big Data came knocking on the door with its myriad of unstructured information coming from everywhere, and BI began to struggle as it needed more structured data to work from.
Data analysts that had until more recently were the luxury hiring of larger companies, began to be more sought after. Using appropriate software, they could integrate the mass of Big Data and find not only KPI an decision making reports but also predictive information with high levels of accuracy. The ability of data analysts to not only gain past information, but also future predictions meant companies with data analysts had far more useable information with which to manage and expand their companies. Truly information that was BI on steroids.
BI will ask "what has happened in the past?" Data analysts will ask "what has happened in the past and will this happen in the future?" and both will get accurate, provable supporting information. BI works on only past information whereas Data Science looks at trends, predictions and potential activities to make their reports. BI needs structured, often static, information whereas Data Science can also work on fast moving, hard to find, unstructured information. Even though both use software, companies are moving from BI to Data Analysis.
Adverse selection and moral hazard are terms used in risk management, managerial economic and policy sciences to characterize situations where one party to a market transaction is at a disadvantage due to asymmetric information. In market transactions, adverse selection occurs when there is a lack of symmetric information prior to agreements between sellers and buyers, while moral hazard occurs when there is asymmetric information between the two parties and material changes in behavior of one party after agreements have been concluded.
For example, adverse selection arises in any situation in which one party to a contract or negotiation, possesses material information relevant to the contract or negotiation that the other party lacks; this asymmetric material information leads the party lacking relevant and material information to make decisions that cause it to suffer adverse effects. Therefore, adverse selection occurs when one party makes decisions without all the relevant material information, which changes the risks allocation between the parties to the transactions.
When one party has access to better or material relevant information than the other party during a transaction, it is said that one has asymmetric information. Therefore, when a party has asymmetric information, they may make an adverse selection. Adverse selection arises when the actual risk is substantially higher than the risk known at the time the agreement was reached. One party suffers adverse effects by accepting terms or receiving prices that do not accurately reflect actual risk exposure. The consequences of asymmetric information may be exacerbated by bounded rationality and cognitive biases attendant to most competitive use of information. Conversely, moral hazard occurs when a party conceals or misrepresents material relevant information and changes behavior after the agreement is concluded and is shielded from the consequences of the risks emanating from material change in behavior
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Every domain that we come across first goes through the registration process and thus has registration details. These details are important in many cases like a business, security, etc. How to Check Website Registration Information? This registration data of any domain is known as whois. Let's have a clear understanding of what whois is all about.
What is Whois?
Whois is a facility that provides basic information of a registered domain, such as domain owner information, registrar information, creation, expiry dates, etc. This information is acquired from a standardized source which can be called as a Whois database.
This is the type of website whois information that the user will get using Whois Lookup.
Domain Name.
Registrar Name.
Registrar Contact Info (Email, Phone no).
Registry Domain ID.
Registrant Organization.
Registrant Address (Street, City, State).
Web Status.
IP information.
Registrar Registration Creation & Expiration dates.
Name Server.
MX Information, and many more.