Lee Young-sang, CEO of DataStreams, attended the Symposium on the Construction of Big Data Security Ecosystem, held on May 26 at Guiyang International Conference and Exhibition Center in Guiyang, the capital of China's Guizhou province.The symposium was hosted by the southwestern city of Guiyang and organized by KOTRA (Korea Trade-Investment Promotion Agency). As vice president of the Korea Big Data Society, Lee Young-sang delivered a speech titled ‘Korean Trends in the Center of World Big Data Industry,’ according to DataStreams, a leading Korean developer of data management solutions.
The symposium kicked off at 1 p.m., with officials from Guiyang, KOTRA, Alibaba, Didi Dache, the Korea Big Data Society and the Internet Society of China in attendance. Big data experts from both countries took the podium to offer their take on the current state of the big data-based security environment and lead in-depth discussions.
CEO Lee talked about the development of S. Korea’s big data technology, explaining soaring data volumes, advances in IoT technologies and the emergence of deep learning.
In addition, Lee introduced ‘SuperDW for Big Data’ (which is DataStreams’ new enterprise data warehouse platform for big data analytics) and data governance for the effective use of omni-channel technology, which enables crisscrossing online and offline channels.
Du Yuejin, vice president of security at Alibaba Group, made a presentation on the construction of a security ecosystem and capabilities for the industry and seller while researcher Zhou Hanhua from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences talked about big data and personal data protection. Che Pinjue, vice president of Alibaba Group and head of the data committee of the group, made a presentation on corporate data and data capabilities.
In 2013, DataStreams released TeraStream for Hadoop (a big data processing and storage solution). And the company developed TeraStream BASS (a solution for analyzing and monitoring big data in real time) in 2014, targeting the IoT market. DataStreams has been preparing itself for the era of big data by making additions to its flagship TeraStream product portfolio.
“We will set our sights on big data utilization, moving beyond simply focusing on collecting and storing big data. By preemptively responding to the needs of Chinese corporate customers, DataStreams will gain ground in the market and create new demand,” Lee said.
Guizhou province has been selected as China’s first big data pilot zone. In 2014, DataStreams entered the Chinese big data market after signing a business agreement with iSoftStone, one of China’s leading IT service providers.