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Data-Driven Personalisation in Markets, Politics and Law

Editat de Uta Kohl, Jacob Eisler
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 apr 2024
Corporations and governments use data-based algorithms to predict and control human behavior. This transforms everyday life - from online shopping and granting mortgages to the length of criminal sentences and personalised medicine. This book reviews and critiques this new socio-technological development and law as its prime facilitator.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781108813082
ISBN-10: 1108813089
Pagini: 334
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press

Cuprins

Part I. Introduction: Theoretical Perspectives; 1. The Pixelated Person – Humanity in the Grip of Algorithmic Personalisation Uta Kohl; 2. Personalisation and Digital Modernity: Deconstructing the Myths of the Subjunctive World Kieron O'Hara; 3. Personalisation, Power and the Datafied Subject Marc Welsh; 4. Personal Data and Collective Value: Data-Driven Personalisation as Network Effect Nick O'Donovan; Part II. Themes: Personal Autonomy, Market Choices and the Presumption of Innocence; 5. Hidden Personal Insights and Entangled in the Algorithmic Model – the Limits of the GDPR in the Personalisation Context Michèle Finck; 6. Personalisation, Markets, and Contract: The Limits of Legal Incrementalism T.T. Arvind; 7. 'All Data is Credit Data' – Personalised Consumer Credit Score and Anti-Discrimination Law Noelia Collado-Rogriguez and Uta Kohl; 8. Sentencing Dangerous Offenders in the Era of Predictive Technologies: New Skin, Same Old Snake? David Gurnham; Part III. Applications: From Personalised Medicine and Pricing to Political Micro-Targeting; 9. 'P4 Medicine' and the Purview of Health Law: The Patient or the Public? Keith Syrett; 10. Personalised Pricing: The Demise of the Fixed Price? Joost Poort and Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius; 11. Data-Driven Algorithms in Criminal Justice: Predictions as Self-Fulfilling Prophecies Pamela Ugwudike; 12. From Global Village to Smart City: Reputation, Recognition, Personalisation, and Ubiquity Daithí Mac Sithigh; 13. Micro-Targeting in Political Campaigns: Political Promise and Democratic Risk Normann Witzleb and Moira Paterson; Part IV. The Future of Personalisation: Algorithmic Foretelling and Its Limits; 14. Regulating Algorithmic Assemblages: Looking Beyond Corporatist AI Ethics Andrew Charlesworth; 15. Scepticism about Big Data's Predictive Power about Human Behaviour: Making a Case for Theory and Simplicity Konstantinos Katsikopoulos; 16. Building Personalisation: Language and the Law Alun Gibbs; 17. Conclusion: Balancing Data-Driven Personalisation and Law as Social Systems Jacob Eisler.

Recenzii

'Exploring the societal sea changes that emerge from the unleashed power of data-driven personalization, Uta Kohl and Jacob Eisler are gifting us a book that is the intellectual equivalent of a beautiful flower bouquet: a diverse and colorful, yet carefully chosen and elegantly arranged set of contributions from scholars representing different disciplines, perspectives, and temperaments, making it an insightful collection that is more than the sum of its individual parts.' Urs Gasser, Executive Director, Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society and Professor of Practice, Harvard Law School
'With vision and panache, Kohl and Eisler, and their contributing authors, identify the hidden perils of the 'personalisation' phenomenon and boldly ask whether its apparent benefits of a 'close personal fit' and efficiency can ever outweigh the damage done to individual agency and communal solidarity, or to our aspirations of equality. Invaluable insights for the policy and legal debates on the use of predictive algorithms in politics, markets and law, which are upon us.' Paul De Hert, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Tilburg University