Per farla finita con i "diritti dei robot" + diritto marittimo e lavoratori delle piattaforme
Ciao a tutt*, vi segnalo due articoli interessanti. 1) Per sbarazzarsi della nozione di "diritti dei robot", guardiamo dentro i processi di produzione e analizziamo il lavoro umano necessario per produrli e renderli operativi. Abeba Birhane, Jelle van Dijk ‘Robot Right? Let’s Talk about Human Welfare Instead’ Preprint arXiv (Submitted on 14 Jan 2020) https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.05046v1 2) Il nuovo articolo di Miriam Cherry propone un approccio legislativo alla tutela dei diritti dei lavoratori su piattaforme digitali, freelance, "gig", microlavoratori, ecc. Non il GDPR, né la legislazione del lavoro californiana, ma... il codice della navigazione! "As such, crowdwork might benefit from the type of sectoral regulation that exists in maritime employment. That would mean regulations specifically crafted and tailored to fit the requirements, special issues, and needs of online crowdworkers. Like the ports that can check for compliance with the MLC, various host or entry points could be checked for compliance in the network that comprises crowdwork. Because the workers behind the platform are largely invisible, such regulatory checks would necessarily involve the turnover of data." Miriam A. Cherry, 'A Global System of Work, A Global System of Regulation?: Crowdwork and Conflicts of Law' Tulane Law Review, Vol. 94, 2019 https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3523303 Buona lettura, ---a -- Antonio A. Casilli Professor, Telecom Paris, Institut Polytechnique de Paris Member, Interdisciplinary Institute for Innovation (i3 UMR 9217 CNRS) Associate Member, LACI-IIAC (EHESS) Faculty Fellow, Nexa Center for Internet & Society *We respect your right to disconnect. This email send time is due to my own workflow efficiency. You are in no obligation to take action or reply to it outside your office hours.*
participants (1)
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Antonio Casilli