[Air-L] Call for abstracts: Making sense of the value of personal data (MyData 2016 workshop)

Tuukka Lehtiniemi tuukka.lehtiniemi at hiit.fi
Mon Apr 18 02:45:56 PDT 2016


Dear AoIR people,

FYI a conference & workshop that some on this list might be interested in.

--------

Call for abstracts: Making sense of the value of personal data (http://mydata2016.org/call-for-abstracts/)

MyData 2016 is an international conference that takes place in Helsinki in end of August / early September. The purpose of the conference is to find ways to unleash the value of personal data through human-centric data management and technological innovation. The event will bring together up to 1000 participants from businesses, the research community, civil society, government and local communities. One track in the conference takes the form of an academic workshop on August 31st.

RATIONALE

In the workshop we aim to unpack and clarify the “ways to unleash the value of personal data,” both the unleashing and the value, from the point of view of people. What does it mean for personal data to be valuable to people? What is the value of disclosing data, choosing to keep it secret, or the ability to harness it for individual, social or societal purposes? In particular, how to understand and assess this value?

Personal data is clearly valuable to firms, who are able to aggregate data over several individuals and contexts. Personal data does bring valuable benefits to people themselves too. Valuable outcomes to people might include personalized or targeted services, and the possibility to generate and employ personal data for self-reflection. At the same time, the increasing necessity to submit to ubiquitous data extraction processes brings along subjective privacy harms. Disclosing data can also lead to tangible, but as of yet unforeseeable, negative consequences at some point in the future. The social nature of personal data makes this also a social question: data about me, and the consequences of sharing it or keeping it secret, may concern also others or the society at large.

Online services are often accessible only after agreeing to data collection and use policies, and firms have framed this as a value exchange of personal data to services. In cases, the users of services may see themselves as the rightful beneficiary of more of the value generated via their data. The current data collection and use practices expect people to be able to make an informed analysis of the benefits and costs of disclosing their data, a practice that is riddled with conceptual and practical difficulties. The consequences of disclosing data are in many cases not transparent or understandable, and the downstream markets of personal data make this even more problematic. People are not intrinsically capable of valuing abstract things – perhaps something to aid people in valuing personal data would be needed? Discussion of personal data is often framed in abstract terms like privacy – perhaps we are also lacking the terminology and concepts to approach the issue?

MOTIVATING QUESTIONS

Your contribution in the workshop could concern the following, or related, questions:

- Is the value of personal data a relevant concept or a useful framework? What new framings or concepts could we employ to better make sense of the uses of personal data?
- How can the consequences of personal data collection and use to our everyday lives be made transparent or understandable?
- What tools could help people in assessing the value of data? What socio-technical solutions could be developed and employed?
- What rights do people have over their personal data? How could the politics of data enhance or endanger individual freedoms?
- What alternatives to the current notice & choice paradigm can be developed? What are the problems these alternatives aim to solve and how?
- How to approach the complexities of personal data vs. aggregated data, and personal data vs. social consequences?
- How to make personal data value exchanges understandable to people who participate in these exchanges?

PRACTICALITIES

Important dates: Workshop on August 31st, abstract DL May 31st

Other details: see http://mydata2016.org/call-for-abstracts/

-------

Regards,

Tuukka Lehtiniemi
Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT
tuukka.lehtiniemi at hiit.fi
+358 50 328 2462




More information about the Air-L mailing list