The internet, a grey area for politics and law

21

October

2018

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There have been some tremendous developments in the field of technology and digitalisation of society. This trend has been pushing human boundaries of what humans are capable of, but also has some moral implications regarding the areas of privacy, autonomy and safety.

Technologies like persuasive technology, IoT, robotics, virtual & augmented reality, digital platforms and biometrics are having an increasing impact in our daily lives. Robotics and IoT mainly in our physical world, namely in our homes where more and more devices are connected to each other. The other 4 technologies have more impact on the sociocultural part of society. Shopping, transactions, listening to music and making new friends are activities that are increasingly taking place in an online environment (Royakkers et al, 2018).

These technologies are still relatively new, so the laws regarding these technologies are not as advanced as they are in other more physically oriented areas of law. One example is surveillance, there are many rules regarding cameras in the streets or at homes of people, on the area of privacy etc. Another sort of ‘digital surveillance’ is that Facebook and Google collect data on the physical whereabouts of its users, and their goal is not to improve the safety of society, but to learn more about their users and monetize this data. There is little to no governance in this area, because the users give platforms like Google and Facebook permission to collect and use this data.

The government should start using contextual integrity (Nissenbaum, 2011) in the making of laws in the digital area. Contextual can be explained by another example: Back in the days people would send their mail by physical letters and they would be brought from a to b by the mailman, if the mailman would start reading all these letters, it would be a scandal and it would be seen as an unprofessional act of the mailman. Nowadays Facebook analyses messages without anyone caring that they are actually doing almost the same as the mailman in this example. This example shows that privacy is not a universal value, but it differs in a different context. Situations that have the same flow of information, but take place in different contexts (online and offline) should be analysed using contextual integrity, to help build better laws for the online public space we’re getting ourselves into.

 

Sources:

Becker, M. J. (2015). Ethiek van de digitale media. Boo

Nissenbaum, H. (2011). A contextual approach to privacy online. Daedalus, 140(4), 32-48

Royakkers, L., Timmer, J., Kool, L., & van Est, R. (2018). Societal and ethical issues of digitization. Ethics and Information Technology, 20(2), 127-142.

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Technology is taking our jobs

18

October

2018

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As the global population is rising, the demand for products and services is also increasing. Especially in fast growing economies, like China.  For example, the demand for clothing is expected to rise due to the migration into the middle class and they are starting to see their clothing as an expression of themselves (Keller et al, 2014). 75% of sales in the luxury goods segment will come from Chinese customers by 2020 (Keller et al, 2014).

This example is just to give you an idea of how much we need to start producing to keep up with the rising demand. In the past years machines have been taking over jobs in all kinds of industries. Automation and robotics took over jobs in production lines, chatbots started to do the work of customer service employees and 3d printing started to take over the assembly lines. Ofcourse these innovations help greatly in terms of speed, efficiency and accuracy. Furthermore they also create jobs in different sectors like IT, but according to Rotman (2013), these technologies are destroying jobs faster than creating them, which contributes to inequality and stagnating growth in the median income.

This can be illustrated in the following graph, displaying productivity and employment. the lines have been closely together in the years between the second world war and 2000, afterwards the gap has been becoming larger by the year, this is also called ‘The great decoupling’ (Rotman, 2013).

 

Screenshot 2018-10-18 at 11.48.14 AM

Jack Ma, Alibaba’s CEO also said in a video that people should be taught things that differentiate us from machines, like music, sports and art. This to make sure that humans remain different from machines and are irreplaceable by any machine. This is because in the past 200 years, humanity has been learning things that are knowledge based, instead of the soft parts mentioned by Jack Ma. We simply cannot teach our kids to compete with machines, because they are smarter, every time.

 

Sources:

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/515926/how-technology-is-destroying-jobs/

https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/marketing-and-sales/our-insights/succeeding-in-tomorrows-global-fashion-market

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