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#datagov

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#30DayChartChallenge Día 12: Gov Data Day! 🏛️ Explorando la distribución del spread 10Y-2Y del Tesoro USA (datos de FRED desde 1976).

Este histograma/densidad va más allá del valor diario: muestra la *probabilidad* histórica de cada nivel del spread. ¡Clave para entender expectativas económicas!

Puntos clave:
* Modo principal > 0 (curva normal es lo más común).
* ¡La inversión (<0, línea discontinua) tiene una probabilidad no trivial! ⚠️ Es la famosa señal pre-recesión. La distribución nos dice cuán "normal" es esa señal en perspectiva histórica.
* La forma general revela info sobre la dinámica de tipos.

Una visualización sobre la estructura probabilística de un indicador líder fundamental.

🛠️ #rstats #ggplot2 #quantmod #grid
📂 Código/Repo: t.ly/0RDmK

Om du förlitar dig på Google Drive, OneDrive, iCloud eller någon annan amerikansk backup-lösning kan det vara värt att hitta en hårddisk som ligger inom EU. Utifall större aktörer slutar tillhandahålla tjänsten i Europa.

Utifallallt så att säga....

Continued thread

Update. "Today we [Harvard Law School @harvard_law Library Innovation Lab @harvardlil] released our archive of data.gov on Source Cooperative. The 16TB collection includes over 311,000 datasets harvested during 2024 and 2025, a complete archive of federal public datasets linked by data.gov. It will be updated daily as new datasets are added to data.gov. This is the first release in our new data vault project to preserve and authenticate vital public datasets for academic research, policymaking, and public use."
lil.law.harvard.edu/blog/2025/

lil.law.harvard.eduAnnouncing the Data.gov Archive | Library Innovation Lab

Trump's war on pronouns continues with the deletion of an online presentation made by a federal worker giving advice to write plainly by using pronouns such as "you" to address readers directly instead of terms like "the purchaser" (nothing to do with gender identity or D.E.I.)

As Koebler points out, this demonstrates a laughable pettiness, but there are more consequential deletions among the ongoing data purge

404media.co/trump-admin-delete

404 Media · Trump Admin Deletes Video Explaining Grammatical Concept of Pronouns in War Against DEIGithub is also revealing a widespread, scattershot effort to nuke not only "DEI" but things that have nothing to do with it.
#uspol#DataGov#DEI

This is very welcome news in the face of Trumpist depredations of US public data.
lil.law.harvard.edu/blog/2025/

"In recent months the Harvard Law School [@harvard_law] Library Innovation Lab [@harvardlil] has created a data vault to download, sign as authentic, and make available copies of public government data that is most valuable to researchers, scholars, civil society and the public at large across every field. To begin, we have collected major portions of the datasets tracked by data.gov, federal #Github repositories, and #PubMed...."

lil.law.harvard.eduPreserving Public U.S. Federal Data | Library Innovation Lab

404media.co/archivists-work-to
As people in the Data Hoarding and #archiving communities have pointed out, on January 21, there were 307,854 datasets on #datagov. As of Thursday, there are 305,564 datasets. Many of the #deletions happened immediately after Trump was inaugurated, according to snapshots of the #website saved on the #InternetArchive’s #WaybackMachine Harvard Univ researcher Jack Cushman has been taking snapshots of Data.gov’s datasets both before and after the inauguration #disparition

404 Media · Archivists Work to Identify and Save the Thousands of Datasets Disappearing From Data.govMore than 2,000 datasets have disappeared from data.gov since Trump was inaugurated. But analyzing exactly what happened and where it went is going to take some time.

"Disproportionately, the datasets that are no longer accessible through the portal come from the Department of Energy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Department of the Interior, NASA, and the Environmental Protection Agency. But determining what is actually gone and what has simply moved or is backed up elsewhere by the government is a manual task, and it's too early to say for sure what is gone and what may have been renamed or updated with a newer version.

This is because data.gov doesn’t always host the data that it is indexing. Sometimes the data is hosted directly on data.gov, but other times it links to an individual agency’s website, where the data is actually hosted. This means archiving and analyzing data.gov is not straightforward.

“Some of [the entries link to] actual data,” Cushman told 404 Media. “And some of them link to a landing page [where the data is hosted]. And the question is—when things are disappearing, is it the data it points to that is gone? Or is it just the index to it that’s gone?”"

404media.co/archivists-work-to

404 Media · Archivists Work to Identify and Save the Thousands of Datasets Disappearing From Data.govMore than 2,000 datasets have disappeared from data.gov since Trump was inaugurated. But analyzing exactly what happened and where it went is going to take some time.