Binary Governance: Lessons from the GDPR’s Approach to Algorithmic Accountability (Q2401)

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Revision as of 09:41, 8 December 2019 by Podehaye (talk | contribs) (‎Created claim: Property:P126: Concerns about autonomy and the potential for manipulation, to a great degree, motivated the indignation around Cambridge Analytica’s targeted manipulation of U.S. voters prior to the 2016 election (and...)
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Binary Governance: Lessons from the GDPR’s Approach to Algorithmic Accountability
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    Secret profiles and decisions made based on secret profiling can threaten personhood and thus dignity by proscribing active individual involvement in the construction of this objectified version of the self.
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    the “ ‘data shadows’ . . . threaten to usurp the constitutive authority of the physical self despite their relatively attenuated and often misleading nature”
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    Algorithmic decision-making founded on individual profiling limits the choices and, thus, the freedom a person will have.
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    Limiting the choices we see—whether by failing to show opportunities or by offering only bad options—limits our freedom to make choices.
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    Failing to be transparent about the fact that individuals are being targeted or the reasons why they are targeted itself may threaten autonomy. Secret profiling and decision-making can lead to manipulation. Without knowing how we are being targeted or why, we can be manipulated into making choices that are not autonomous at all.
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    Concerns about autonomy and the potential for manipulation, to a great degree, motivated the indignation around Cambridge Analytica’s targeted manipulation of U.S. voters prior to the 2016 election (and motivated the California legislature to enact the California Consumer Privacy Act in 2018).
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