User:Newdatamgt/Restructured data
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Restructured Data In the digital world of Computer Science and Information Technology, there are always new ways of naming data structures and the lack of a data structure. Eventually, there are terms that describe varying degrees of how data is structured or not. Data Models help determine the structure of data (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_structure). When data falls outside the typical bounds of "Structured Data", it becomes classified as "Unstructured Data" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unstructured_data). Because "Unstructured Data" cannot fall under the classification of "Structured Data", it must stand on it's own as Unstructured Data. However, when "Unstructured Data" is gathered from multiple locations, multiple countries, multiple cloud providers (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computing#Provider), stored, organized, or indexed in a predictable manor, becomes searchable in a reliable and repeatable way, using standards without APIs (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_programming_interface), "Unstructured Data" becomes "Restructured Data", because there is now a structure, yet the data has no relation inside a database, no defined structures, no computational complexities or mappings. The data is seemingly completely unrelated, yet commonalities can now be searched, exploited, identified, related, saved, and used in new ways with no regard where the information was created. "Restructured Data" combines "Unstructured Data", "Metadata", with the associative properties and relevance of "Big Data" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_data), while reducing duplicate information and maintaining "Chain-of-Custody" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_of_custody) in almost every country - allowing for data submissions in legal matters to maintain defensibly. "Restructured Data" can aggregate searches of "Unstructured Data" from multiple locations, from multiple countries, while maintain regulatory requirements where the data was created or transferred, without modification via "Federated Search" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federated_search).
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