Data-owning democracy or digital socialism?
Una sintesi del dibattito attorno alla c.d. data ownership democracy, in cui l’autore individua tre limiti (cfr abstract sotto), condensabili in questa frase: "The common element in these criticisms is that DOD remains too closely wedded to existing conditions and does not make a strong enough intervention to alter the relations of power between citizens and corporations." Data-owning democracy or digital socialism? James Muldoon, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13698230.2022.2120737 This article contrasts two reform proposals articulated in recent debates about how to democratize the digital economy: data-owning democracy and digital socialism. A data-owning democracy is a political-economic regime characterized by the widespread distribution of data as capital among citizens, whereas digital socialism entails the social ownership of productive assets in the digital economy and popular control over digital services. The article argues that while a degree of complementarity exists between the two, there are important limitations to theories of data-owning democracy that have not yet received significant attention within the literature. The bulk of the article highlights three ways in which digital socialists would consider a data-owning democracy to fall short of achieving a more just digital economy: a lack of workplace democracy, limitations in terms of scope, and a lack of democratic control over long-term investment decisions in new technology. The article thus contributes to determining what is at stake in recent debates about how to democratize the digital economy. AV
Caro Antonio, grazie per il bell'articolo che -- come nei casi degli odierni dibattiti su sovranità digitale, costituzionalismo digitale o un nuovo "effetto Bruxelles" -- gettano luce su alcuni problemi di fondo dei fenomeni in corso. Se posso, però, l'alternativa suggerita dall'articolo, sia pure con le sfumature del caso, rischia di far dimenticare altri problemi (economici, giuridici e perfino morali) altrettanto importanti. Ci sono ad esempio le politiche e normative europee non solo per gli usi illeciti della tecnologia, ma anche per il problema del suo mancato utilizzo, v. in medicina e in ambito sanitario, con i relativi costi opportunità e i 'prezzi ombra' dell'economia. Ammetto, si tratta di un discorso complesso che richiede il mezzo, il tempo e la pausa meditativa di un articolo scientifico. Per cui rimando a https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s44206-022-00021-3 Ma, perbacco, è proprio il tema che discuterò domani con gli amici e fellow nexiani Marco e Luca, e tanti altri ancora, al convegno che Anita (Nexa Media) ha diffuso in lista due giorni fa. Ancora grazie Antonio. A domani! Ugo Il giorno gio 27 ott 2022 alle ore 15:25 Vetro' Antonio < antonio.vetro@polito.it> ha scritto:
Una sintesi del dibattito attorno alla c.d. data ownership democracy, in cui l’autore individua tre limiti (cfr abstract sotto), condensabili in questa frase:
"*The common element in these criticisms is that DOD remains too closely wedded to existing conditions and does not make a strong enough intervention to alter the relations of power between citizens and corporations*."
*Data-owning democracy or digital socialism?* James Muldoon, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13698230.2022.2120737
This article contrasts two reform proposals articulated in recent debates about how to democratize the digital economy: data-owning democracy and digital socialism. A data-owning democracy is a political-economic regime characterized by the widespread distribution of data as capital among citizens, whereas digital socialism entails the social ownership of productive assets in the digital economy and popular control over digital services. The article argues that while a degree of complementarity exists between the two, there are important limitations to theories of data-owning democracy that have not yet received significant attention within the literature. The bulk of the article highlights three ways in which digital socialists would consider a data-owning democracy to fall short of achieving a more just digital economy: a lack of workplace democracy, limitations in terms of scope, and a lack of democratic control over long-term investment decisions in new technology. The article thus contributes to determining what is at stake in recent debates about how to democratize the digital economy.
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/Data-owning democracy or digital socialism?/ James Muldoon, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13698230.2022.2120737
"Services like a search engine, online messaging and other basic infrastructure should be operated for the public benefit without any profit being generated from the service" Proprio ieri ... "La nostra libertà immolata sui social? Il /fediverso/ è l’alternativa, ma nessuno lo usa" [1] A. [1] https://www.agendadigitale.eu/sicurezza/privacy/la-nostra-liberta-immolata-s...
participants (3)
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Antonio -
Ugo Pagallo -
Vetro' Antonio