@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels 1.2.109 → 1.2.111

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/en/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": {
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+ "keyword": "flag",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "PNG": "PNG",
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+ "PHL": "PHL"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "hours": "hours",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
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+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
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+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
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+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "source": "source",
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+ "callsign": "callsign",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "private-png-presence": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
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+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
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+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
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+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
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  "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
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  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2114,8 +2162,8 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-mpa-all": {
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- "name": "MPAs",
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- "description": "Marine protected areas (MPAs) are areas of the ocean set aside for long-term conservation. These can have different levels of protection, and the range of activities allowed or prohibited within their boundaries varies considerably. Source: World Database on Protected Areas. Last updated: November 2022. See more detailed <a href='https://globalfishingwatch.org/faqs/reference-layer-sources/' target='_blank' rel=noopener'>metadata information</a> for this layer.",
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+ "name": "MPAs (WDPA)",
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+ "description": "Marine protected areas (MPAs) are areas of the ocean set aside for long-term conservation. These can have different levels of protection, and the range of activities allowed or prohibited within their boundaries varies considerably. Source: World Database on Protected Areas. See more detailed <a href='https://globalfishingwatch.org/faqs/reference-layer-sources/' target='_blank' rel=noopener'>metadata information</a> for this layer.",
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  "schema": {}
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  },
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  "public-mpa-no-take": {
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
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  },
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  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
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  "lon": "lon",
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  "flag": {
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  "keyword": "flag",
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  "enum": {
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- "PNG": "PNG"
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+ "PNG": "PNG",
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+ "PHL": "PHL"
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  }
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  },
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  "hours": "hours",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
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  },
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  "public-png-presence": {
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  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the National Directorate of Aquatic Spaces of the Ecuadorian Navy. Data is collected using Ecuador's vessel monitoring system via satellites and is published on a seven-day delay containing information on vessels’ identity, location, speed, course, and movement. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity.” It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity,” “fishing” or “fishing effort,” as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques.",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
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  "lon": "lon",
@@ -2608,8 +2657,8 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-protectedseas": {
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- "name": "Protected Seas",
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- "description": "Protected seas (only category IUCN MPA)",
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+ "name": "MPAs (ProtectedSeas)",
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+ "description": "Marine protected areas (MPAs) are areas of the ocean set aside for long-term conservation. These can have different levels of protection, and the range of activities allowed or prohibited within their boundaries varies considerably. Source: ProtectedSeas Navigator. ProtectedSeas assigns a Level of Fishing Protection (LFP) score to each area based on an analysis of restrictions on marine life extraction. You can use the filter icon to explore the different LFP scores, which are, Least restrictive: No known fishing restrictions; Less restrictive: Few species- or gear-specific restrictions apply; Moderately restrictive: Several species- or gear-specific restrictions apply; or either commercial fishing or recreational fishing is entirely prohibited; Heavily restrictive: Fishing is mostly prohibited, with few exceptions; Most restrictive: Fishing is prohibited. See more detailed <a href='https://protectedseas.net/mpa-methods/' target='_blank' rel=noopener'>metadata information</a> for this layer. ",
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  "schema": {
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  "removal_of_marine_life_is_prohibited": {
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  "keyword": "Level of Fishing Protection",
package/es/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": {
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+ "keyword": "bandera",
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+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "PNG",
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+ "PHL": "PHL"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "hours": "hours",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "bandera",
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+ "source": "fuente",
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+ "callsign": "signatura",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1113
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "lat",
1116
+ "lon": "lon",
1117
+ "flag": "bandera",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
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+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
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+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
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  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
1079
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  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
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  },
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  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2473
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
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  "lon": "lon",
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  "flag": {
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  "keyword": "bandera",
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  "enum": {
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- "PNG": "PNG"
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+ "PNG": "PNG",
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+ "PHL": "PHL"
2433
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  }
2434
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  },
2435
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  "hours": "hours",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
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  },
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  "public-png-presence": {
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  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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- "description": "Los datos del sistema de monitoreo de embarcaciones (VMS) son proporcionados por la Armada de Ecuador a través de la Dirección Nacional de Espacios Acuáticos. Los datos se recopilan utilizando el sistema de seguimiento de embarcaciones de Ecuador a través de satélites y se publican con un retraso de siete días. Los datos contienen información sobre la identidad, ubicación, velocidad, rumbo y movimiento de las embarcaciones. Global Fishing Watch analiza estos datos utilizando los mismos algoritmos desarrollados para el sistema de identificación automática (AIS) para identificar la actividad y los comportamientos pesqueros. El algoritmo clasifica cada punto de datos transmitido por las embarcaciones como pesca aparentemente o no pesca, y muestra el primero en el mapa de calor de la actividad pesquera de Global Fishing Watch. El sistema VMS transmite datos de manera diferente a AIS y puede proporcionar diferentes medidas de integridad, precisión y calidad. Global Fishing Watch mejora continuamente sus algoritmos en todos los formatos de transmisión de datos para identificar algorítmicamente la \"actividad de pesca aparente\". Es posible que no se identifique alguna actividad pesquera o que el mapa de calor muestre una actividad pesquera aparente cuando la pesca no se está llevando a cabo. Por estas razones, Global Fishing Watch califica los términos “actividad pesquera”, “pesca” o “esfuerzo pesquero” como aparentes en lugar de ciertos. Toda la información de Global Fishing Watch sobre la \"aparente actividad pesquera\" debe considerarse una estimación y debe confiarse en ella únicamente a discreción del usuario. Los algoritmos de detección de pesca de Global Fishing Watch se desarrollan y prueban utilizando datos de eventos de pesca reales recopilados por observadores y se combinan con análisis de expertos de datos de movimiento de embarcaciones AIS, lo que da como resultado la clasificación manual de miles de eventos de pesca conocidos. Global Fishing Watch también colabora ampliamente con investigadores académicos a través de nuestro programa de investigación para compartir datos de clasificación de la actividad pesquera y mejorar las técnicas de clasificación automatizadas.",
2507
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
2459
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
2461
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  "lon": "lon",
package/fr/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
1074
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
1075
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  }
1076
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  },
1077
+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
1078
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1079
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
1080
+ "schema": {
1081
+ "lat": "lat",
1082
+ "lon": "lon",
1083
+ "flag": {
1084
+ "keyword": "pavillon",
1085
+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "PNG",
1087
+ "PHL": "PHL"
1088
+ }
1089
+ },
1090
+ "hours": "heures",
1091
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1092
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1096
+ }
1097
+ },
1098
+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
1099
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
1100
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
1101
+ "schema": {
1102
+ "id": "id",
1103
+ "flag": "pavillon",
1104
+ "source": "source",
1105
+ "callsign": "indicatifs d'appel",
1106
+ "shipname": "shipname",
1107
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1108
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1109
+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
1112
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1113
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "lat",
1116
+ "lon": "lon",
1117
+ "flag": "pavillon",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1119
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1120
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1121
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
1125
  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "Événements de rencontre (AIS)",
1079
1127
  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
2422
2470
  },
2423
2471
  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
2424
2472
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2425
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2473
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2426
2474
  "schema": {
2427
2475
  "lat": "lat",
2428
2476
  "lon": "lon",
2429
2477
  "flag": {
2430
2478
  "keyword": "pavillon",
2431
2479
  "enum": {
2432
- "PNG": "PNG"
2480
+ "PNG": "PNG",
2481
+ "PHL": "PHL"
2433
2482
  }
2434
2483
  },
2435
2484
  "hours": "heures",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
2455
2504
  },
2456
2505
  "public-png-presence": {
2457
2506
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2458
- "description": "Description pending",
2507
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
2459
2508
  "schema": {
2460
2509
  "lat": "lat",
2461
2510
  "lon": "lon",
package/id/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
1074
1074
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
1075
1075
  }
1076
1076
  },
1077
+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
1078
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1079
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
1080
+ "schema": {
1081
+ "lat": "lat",
1082
+ "lon": "lon",
1083
+ "flag": {
1084
+ "keyword": "flag",
1085
+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "PNG",
1087
+ "PHL": "PHL"
1088
+ }
1089
+ },
1090
+ "hours": "hours",
1091
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1092
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1096
+ }
1097
+ },
1098
+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
1099
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
1100
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
1101
+ "schema": {
1102
+ "id": "id",
1103
+ "flag": "flag",
1104
+ "source": "source",
1105
+ "callsign": "callsign",
1106
+ "shipname": "shipname",
1107
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1108
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1109
+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
1112
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1113
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "lat",
1116
+ "lon": "lon",
1117
+ "flag": "flag",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1119
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1120
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1121
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
1125
  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
1079
1127
  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
2422
2470
  },
2423
2471
  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
2424
2472
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2425
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2473
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2426
2474
  "schema": {
2427
2475
  "lat": "lat",
2428
2476
  "lon": "lon",
2429
2477
  "flag": {
2430
2478
  "keyword": "flag",
2431
2479
  "enum": {
2432
- "PNG": "PNG"
2480
+ "PNG": "PNG",
2481
+ "PHL": "PHL"
2433
2482
  }
2434
2483
  },
2435
2484
  "hours": "hours",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
2455
2504
  },
2456
2505
  "public-png-presence": {
2457
2506
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2458
- "description": "Description pending",
2507
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
2459
2508
  "schema": {
2460
2509
  "lat": "lat",
2461
2510
  "lon": "lon",
package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  {
2
2
  "name": "@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels",
3
- "version": "1.2.109",
3
+ "version": "1.2.111",
4
4
  "license": "MIT",
5
5
  "scripts": {
6
6
  "start": "kill-port 8000 && serve -p 8000 --cors=true",
package/pt/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
1074
1074
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
1075
1075
  }
1076
1076
  },
1077
+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
1078
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1079
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
1080
+ "schema": {
1081
+ "lat": "lat",
1082
+ "lon": "lon",
1083
+ "flag": {
1084
+ "keyword": "flag",
1085
+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "PNG",
1087
+ "PHL": "PHL"
1088
+ }
1089
+ },
1090
+ "hours": "horas",
1091
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1092
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1096
+ }
1097
+ },
1098
+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
1099
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
1100
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
1101
+ "schema": {
1102
+ "id": "id",
1103
+ "flag": "flag",
1104
+ "source": "source",
1105
+ "callsign": "callsign",
1106
+ "shipname": "Embarcação",
1107
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "última data de transmissão",
1108
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "primeira data de transmissão"
1109
+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
1112
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1113
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "lat",
1116
+ "lon": "lon",
1117
+ "flag": "flag",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1119
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1120
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1121
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
1125
  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
1079
1127
  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
2422
2470
  },
2423
2471
  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
2424
2472
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2425
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2473
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2426
2474
  "schema": {
2427
2475
  "lat": "lat",
2428
2476
  "lon": "lon",
2429
2477
  "flag": {
2430
2478
  "keyword": "flag",
2431
2479
  "enum": {
2432
- "PNG": "PNG"
2480
+ "PNG": "PNG",
2481
+ "PHL": "PHL"
2433
2482
  }
2434
2483
  },
2435
2484
  "hours": "horas",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
2455
2504
  },
2456
2505
  "public-png-presence": {
2457
2506
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2458
- "description": "Description pending",
2507
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
2459
2508
  "schema": {
2460
2509
  "lat": "lat",
2461
2510
  "lon": "lon",
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
1074
1074
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
1075
1075
  }
1076
1076
  },
1077
+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
1078
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1079
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
1080
+ "schema": {
1081
+ "lat": "lat",
1082
+ "lon": "lon",
1083
+ "flag": {
1084
+ "keyword": "flag",
1085
+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "PNG",
1087
+ "PHL": "PHL"
1088
+ }
1089
+ },
1090
+ "hours": "hours",
1091
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1092
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1096
+ }
1097
+ },
1098
+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
1099
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
1100
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)",
1101
+ "schema": {
1102
+ "id": "id",
1103
+ "flag": "flag",
1104
+ "source": "source",
1105
+ "callsign": "callsign",
1106
+ "shipname": "shipname",
1107
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1108
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1109
+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
1112
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
1113
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "lat",
1116
+ "lon": "lon",
1117
+ "flag": "flag",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1119
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
1120
+ "vessel-groups": "vessel-groups",
1121
+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
1125
  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
1079
1127
  "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
2422
2470
  },
2423
2471
  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
2424
2472
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2425
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a two-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2473
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2426
2474
  "schema": {
2427
2475
  "lat": "lat",
2428
2476
  "lon": "lon",
2429
2477
  "flag": {
2430
2478
  "keyword": "flag",
2431
2479
  "enum": {
2432
- "PNG": "PNG"
2480
+ "PNG": "PNG",
2481
+ "PHL": "PHL"
2433
2482
  }
2434
2483
  },
2435
2484
  "hours": "hours",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
2455
2504
  },
2456
2505
  "public-png-presence": {
2457
2506
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
2458
- "description": "Description pending",
2507
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS.",
2459
2508
  "schema": {
2460
2509
  "lat": "lat",
2461
2510
  "lon": "lon",
package/val/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -1074,6 +1074,54 @@
1074
1074
  "vessel_id": "crwdns9477:0crwdne9477:0"
1075
1075
  }
1076
1076
  },
1077
+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
1078
+ "name": "crwdns30903:0crwdne30903:0",
1079
+ "description": "crwdns30905:0crwdne30905:0",
1080
+ "schema": {
1081
+ "lat": "crwdns30907:0crwdne30907:0",
1082
+ "lon": "crwdns30909:0crwdne30909:0",
1083
+ "flag": {
1084
+ "keyword": "crwdns30911:0crwdne30911:0",
1085
+ "enum": {
1086
+ "PNG": "crwdns30913:0crwdne30913:0",
1087
+ "PHL": "crwdns30915:0crwdne30915:0"
1088
+ }
1089
+ },
1090
+ "hours": "crwdns30917:0crwdne30917:0",
1091
+ "vessel_id": "crwdns30919:0crwdne30919:0",
1092
+ "elevation_m": "crwdns30921:0crwdne30921:0",
1093
+ "vessel-groups": "crwdns30923:0crwdne30923:0",
1094
+ "distance_from_port_m": "crwdns30925:0crwdne30925:0",
1095
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "crwdns30927:0crwdne30927:0"
1096
+ }
1097
+ },
1098
+ "private-png-fishing-vessels": {
1099
+ "name": "crwdns30929:0crwdne30929:0",
1100
+ "description": "crwdns30931:0crwdne30931:0",
1101
+ "schema": {
1102
+ "id": "crwdns30933:0crwdne30933:0",
1103
+ "flag": "crwdns30935:0crwdne30935:0",
1104
+ "source": "crwdns30937:0crwdne30937:0",
1105
+ "callsign": "crwdns30939:0crwdne30939:0",
1106
+ "shipname": "crwdns30941:0crwdne30941:0",
1107
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "crwdns30943:0crwdne30943:0",
1108
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "crwdns30945:0crwdne30945:0"
1109
+ }
1110
+ },
1111
+ "private-png-presence": {
1112
+ "name": "crwdns30947:0crwdne30947:0",
1113
+ "description": "crwdns30949:0crwdne30949:0",
1114
+ "schema": {
1115
+ "lat": "crwdns30951:0crwdne30951:0",
1116
+ "lon": "crwdns30953:0crwdne30953:0",
1117
+ "flag": "crwdns30955:0crwdne30955:0",
1118
+ "vessel_id": "crwdns30957:0crwdne30957:0",
1119
+ "elevation_m": "crwdns30959:0crwdne30959:0",
1120
+ "vessel-groups": "crwdns30961:0crwdne30961:0",
1121
+ "distance_from_port_m": "crwdns30963:0crwdne30963:0",
1122
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "crwdns30965:0crwdne30965:0"
1123
+ }
1124
+ },
1077
1125
  "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1078
1126
  "name": "crwdns26730:0crwdne26730:0",
1079
1127
  "description": "crwdns26732:0crwdne26732:0",
@@ -2422,14 +2470,15 @@
2422
2470
  },
2423
2471
  "public-png-fishing-effort": {
2424
2472
  "name": "crwdns30737:0crwdne30737:0",
2425
- "description": "crwdns30739:0crwdne30739:0",
2473
+ "description": "crwdns30967:0crwdne30967:0",
2426
2474
  "schema": {
2427
2475
  "lat": "crwdns30741:0crwdne30741:0",
2428
2476
  "lon": "crwdns30743:0crwdne30743:0",
2429
2477
  "flag": {
2430
2478
  "keyword": "crwdns30745:0crwdne30745:0",
2431
2479
  "enum": {
2432
- "PNG": "crwdns30747:0crwdne30747:0"
2480
+ "PNG": "crwdns30747:0crwdne30747:0",
2481
+ "PHL": "crwdns30969:0crwdne30969:0"
2433
2482
  }
2434
2483
  },
2435
2484
  "hours": "crwdns30749:0crwdne30749:0",
@@ -2455,7 +2504,7 @@
2455
2504
  },
2456
2505
  "public-png-presence": {
2457
2506
  "name": "crwdns30779:0crwdne30779:0",
2458
- "description": "crwdns30781:0crwdne30781:0",
2507
+ "description": "crwdns30971:0crwdne30971:0",
2459
2508
  "schema": {
2460
2509
  "lat": "crwdns30783:0crwdne30783:0",
2461
2510
  "lon": "crwdns30785:0crwdne30785:0",