
Måns Svensson
Senior lecturer (Leave of Absence)

Law and Digital Society
Author
Summary, in English
In this article we argue the need for more socio-legal scrutiny in a digitally mediated and data-driven development. We focus and briefly outline socio-legally relevant aspects of the “sharing” economy, that poses a number of conceptual issues on how we understand and regulate innovative platform based ventures. This also arguably underscores a number of issues relating to the role of consumer and user data and the implications of this “datafication”, not least in terms of questions of accountability and balancing of both powers and privacy in a data-driven world that often is described as a “black box” (cf. Pasquale, 2015) in the sense that much of the automated processes – such as the workings of algorithms and third party trade of consumer data – is withheld from insight and transparency.
Department/s
- Lund University Internet Institute (LUii)
- Centre for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies
- Centre for Work Environment and Leadership
- Department of Sociology of Law
- MECW: The Middle East in the Contemporary World
Publishing year
2017-01-24
Language
English
Pages
4-6
Publication/Series
RCSL Newsletter
Volume
2017
Issue
1
Full text
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Document type
Journal article (comment)
Topic
- Law and Society
Keywords
- sharing economy
- law and society
- sociology of law
- law
- algorithmic accountability
- black box society
- datafication
- privacy
- automation
- algorithms
Status
Published