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Smart City Digital Governance – Lunch Talk mit Ellen P. Goodman

Am 04. Dezember findet ein öffentlicher Brown-bag Lunch mit Ellen P. Goodman, Professorin an der Rutgers Law School statt. Sie wird über Goverance-Herausforderungen rund um das Sidewalk Lab Projekt in Toronto berichten. Die Veranstaltung findet auf Englisch statt, weitere Informationen untenstehend.

 

O P E N    B R O W N – B A G   L U N C H

Smart City Digital Governance –
Lunch Talk with Ellen P. Goodman
Wednesday, 04 December 2019 | 1 pm | HIIG

 

Cities around the world are rapidly adopting digital technologies, data analytics, and the trappings of “smart” infrastructure.  These innovations are touted as solutions to help rationalize services and address rising urban challenges in housing, transit, energy, law enforcement, health care, waste management, and population flow.  Promises of urban innovation unite cities’ need for help with technology firms’ need for markets. As cities and other public entities embark on partnerships with technology firms, they need to manage risks of privatization (e.g., governance and services), domination (e.g., individual and collective loss of control over data and optionality), and platformisation (e.g., turning all activity into platform-mediated market exchanges).

Sidewalk Labs, a Google affiliate, has been working on a smart city implementation on the Toronto Waterfront. While details are still evolving, the plan is for a new kind of data-driven urban environment; “the world’s first neighborhood built from the internet up.” Since 2017, the company has worked with public authorities on developing a city-within-a-city featuring state-of-the-art sustainable architecture, autonomous vehicles, sensor-based surveillance, and data-driven “responsive” services. The Sidewalk Toronto project shows how technology and technocratic visions can outpace public governance, how lack of transparency can erode public trust, and how the public can push back. Governance issues to be worked out include: the use of algorithmic impact statements, the evolving concept of “digital restraint,”  procurement, and data control.

Ellen P. Goodman, is a Professor at Rutgers Law School and Co-Director of the Rutgers Institute for Information Policy & Law. Her research interests include smart cities, algorithmic governance, freedom of expression, platform policies, communications architectures, media and advertising law, and transparency policy.

Bookings

Eine Anmeldung ist für diese Veranstaltung aktuell nicht möglich.

Datum der Veranstaltung

04.12.2019 | 1.00 pm – 2.00 pm ical | gcal
 

Standort

Humboldt Institut für Internet und Gesellschaft,  Französische Straße 9,  10117 Berlin

Kontakt

Christian Grauvogel

Ehem. Leiter Dialog und Wissenstransfer | Projektkoordinator SET

DIGITAL SOCIETY VORTRÄGE

Diese exklusive Vorlesungsreihe entwickelt eine europäische Perspektive zu den aktuellen Transformationsprozessen innerhalb unserer Gesellschaft.

DIGITALER SALON

Einmal im Monat laden wir ausgewählte Gäste ein, um gemeinsam mit dem Publikum über die Auswirkungen der Digitalisierung auf die Gesellschaft zu sprechen.

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