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Sean W. Bohan 

Jeff Braswell 

Nathan Southern 

Mason Wagoner 

James Madison 

Dale Harris 

Jenny Tornquist

Lori Munn 

Michael Payne

Matt Hinds-Aldrich

Kevin Petruzielo

Ken Sayers 

Reggie Scarpa

Kristian Farner

Mike Nurse

Patti Norton-Gatto

Joseph Nibert

Susan Chudwick 

Rambabu Adabala 

Ash Naik 

Minutes

Discussion items

I. James Madison discussion

A. Consumption layer - recap on GB mtg

  1. Value prop to carriers. Some discussion around this re: OSS and consumption of data by carriers and regulators.
  2. Clarification wrt vision for consumption layer
  3. Wrt Gb Meeting comment about pulling all of vehicles of a certain type: how slice and diceable should the results be to accommodate regulator requests? This used to be highly doable late 90s/early 2000s. Should we have some mechanism in openIDL platform to do this? Or if someone requests it, should they be able to do it themselves?
  4. If data is structured correctly and sufficiently relational, one can ask numerous questions that differ from original query as long as data is sufficiently deep?
  5. KS: each one of the "slices and dices" is a different request, because requestors want to know up front at beginning what data is being used for.  Also: sufficient depth to do slice and dice would be deeper than what carriers want to share?
  6. KS: Carrier side transactional premiums and claims rep a sufficient depth. Carriers have extreme depth, but also veto power to refuse to share a specific level of data.
  7. PA: This notwithstanding some of the reports break down very far - so we need to ask where data gets too granular to come out - i.e., where line is.
  8. JM: what can we say to carriers to get them more involved? Discussion concerns idea that if we've contributed to a data set, we have a right to that data set. Is this a high enough value proposition to help sell it? If I have the right to see aggregate data from other carriers, is this enough of a value proposition to buy in?
  9. DH: Probably not - since most of the data calls are state regulator requested. Most of calls done are recurring, so little utility to them, but people are interested when there is a new call what people are asking for because it might point to a new public policy of which there is limited awareness.
  10. PNG: It might be a question of whether individual requests can replace Iso requests and save costs.
  11. JM: The concern: the data that leaves the system/firewall is where the value proposition is - one of arguments is: if we are a contributor, we get to see data. Is this valuable? And how likely is a carrier to let one see that? These calls tend to be one off and it is easier for regulators-  both of these undermine business case.
  12. PA: Some of smaller carriers would likely be into getting more data and attaining greater visibility. 
  13. JM: Question: even with threshold in place, why would a large carrier share data so that others can see it? 
  14. KS & DH: what is the value proposition for the larger carriers? (Not the small ones).
  15. DH: Not so much value to the big carriers but likely in future when regulators' questions are posed more accurately and efficiently?
  16. SC: made an argument for large-scaled efficiency (clarity on what is being looked for repeatedly) ahead of ad hoc data calls

II. Job - what does it mean to load HDS and what happens when it fails? 

Minutes

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Action items

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