Filed under compliance-architecture
Every brief tagged "compliance-architecture".
- § 01 · DATA-FUNDAMENTALS
What Is Data, Really? — A Plain-Language Primer on Rules and Compliance
What does it actually mean to call something 'data,' and what turns raw recordings into a data asset? Wang Qinglan uses a toy storage room metaphor to walk through the foundational concept overseas readers often skip: data is not just 'records' — it's records made under rules. Master data, metadata, ontology, the three-tier compliance taxonomy (legal / ethical / promised), and the three-step compliance workflow (select / allocate / execute) — all anchored in a concrete example a non-specialist can follow.
- § 02 · DATA-GOVERNANCE
Data Governance vs. Data Management vs. Data Compliance — A Plain-Language Disambiguation
Wang Qinglan disambiguates three terms that compliance and data teams habitually conflate: data governance, data management, and data compliance. Using a 'data manor' metaphor (the family council vs. the steward team vs. the community monitor), she maps each function to its job — setting direction, executing efficiently, and operating sustainably within external rules and self-imposed commitments. The piece is useful precisely where bilingual confusion is highest: 'data governance' in English carries different connotations than 数据治理 in Chinese practice.