We can’t let tech companies use algorithms to police us after COVID-19
The pandemic has demonstrated the risks of relying on algorithms to remove harmful content.
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Published in:Can Europe Make It?Four invisible enemies in the first pandemic of a “datafied society”
COVID-19 lays bare the nuances of a society undergoing digital data transformation in nearly every field of human...
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Published in:digitaLibertiesYour data makes the web personal
Online personalisation is where you see specific content based on your personal data. How bad can it be?
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Published in:Can Europe Make It?The surveillance industry won’t save us from crises
Turning to the security industry isn’t the solution: it’s a symptom of the problem.
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Published in:digitaLibertiesTrusting video in a fake news world
As the threat of doctored videos grows, we need a technical solution.
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Published in:digitaLibertiesDemand data transparency everywhere
Introducing yourData: An openDemocracy project to show your data to you when it is used
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Published in:ourEconomyDigital public assets should be democratised, not given away for private profit
'Open’ government data has been captured by private interests. The only way to democratise the use of digital public...
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Published in:digitaLibertiesPrivacy is the new wilderness we must protect
A new conception of privacy as an ambient, public good is necessary if we are to save our rights as individuals.
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Published in:openDemocracyUKAre China’s facial recognition trials really the example the Met police want to follow?
“Each face is algorithmically cast over with suspicion, checked against the authority’s blacklist”.
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Published in:HomeFacebook and Google pressured EU experts to soften fake news regulations, say insiders
On the eve of European elections, the tech giants stand accused of sabotaging the European Union’s fight against...
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Published in: digitaLibertiesyourData – helping you see data in action
yourData is openDemocracy’s project to bring more transparency to the web.
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?WhatsApp’s decision limiting the spread of viral messages – what it means for democracy
The title of WhatsApp’s official post explaining its decision, “Keeping WhatsApp Personal and Private,” could not...
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?How data-mining companies are set to gain from the COVID-19 pandemic
Their business model, challenged by numerous activists and analysts, is likely to gain further public acceptance, to...
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?Privacy, public health and the pandemic
What we have to guard against is the diffusion of emergency logics across time and space, not the redefinition of...
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Published in: TransformationNeuroliberalism: welcome to government in the 21st century
The use of psychological techniques to shape human behaviour is increasingly common. Should we be worried?
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Published in: openJusticePrice and prejudice: automated decision-making and the UK government (podcast)
We spoke to lawyer Cori Crider about why automated decision-making in government is a major challenge of our time.
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Published in: openJustice: InvestigationPrice and prejudice: automated decision-making and the UK government
The use of automated decision-making in UK public services is on the rise. Do not be fooled by the cloak of...
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Published in: digitaLiberties: OpinionYour man in the public gallery – Julian Assange hearing, Day Four
James Lewis QC argued that Parliament had not included a bar on extradition for political offences in the 2003 Act,...
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Published in: digitaLibertiesyourData – helping you see data in action
yourData is openDemocracy’s project to bring more transparency to the web.
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Published in: digitaLibertiesOnline adverts know you too well
Behavioural Advertising 101: A brief introduction to the types of ads we encounter online — and what they know about us
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Published in: digitaLibertiesLand rights, bushfires and indigenous rights online
"I believe indigenous peoples can teach us a lot about the power of resilience, alongside lessons on how to save...
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Published in: digitaLibertiesHow to fight online misinformation: beyond laws and algorithms, try vaccination
An online game that puts the player in the shoes of a master manipulator strengthens people’s defences against fake...
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionGet broadband done! How the UK can deliver a full fibre future
The UK led the world in the privatisation of public services. By bringing digital infrastructure into democratic...
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Published in: ourEconomy: OpinionIs “another internet possible”? Inside Labour’s digital infrastructure plans
Labour’s proposals offer an invitation to radically rethink the role that digital infrastructures can play in...
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Published in: openDemocracyUK: OpinionThreat to our digital rights revealed in US-UK trade talks leak
Leaked records of US-UK trade negotiations suggest the US is targeting our digital rights – and the UK seems...
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Published in: Human Rights and the InternetPrivate equity firm procures .org from the Internet Society, or: How the public interest got sold-out (again)
ISOC has sold off something that was not theirs to sell off in the first place; a domain run by a not-for-profit...
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Published in: openDemocracyUK: OpinionAnother brick in the wall – can we save child rights from school surveillance?
30 years ago the Berlin Wall fell, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child was born. But British children’s...
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Published in: hriBRICS countries to build digital sovereignty
The push towards digital sovereignty is frequently criticized as a Trojan horse for authoritarian measures. It's...
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Published in: digitaLibertiesBig Brother says ‘No’: surveillance and income management of asylum seekers through the UK ASPEN Card
The imposition of the ASPEN Card on those who are marginalised and unable to resist is no accident. It enables the...