Sublime
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To meet this challenge, the regime must evolve from content-centred regulation to systems-level accountability —from evaluating discrete outputs to interrogating the design logic of digital environments. This requires a shift in regulatory maturity: what might be called a second-order regime , one that targets architectural manipulation as a first-... See more
Dr Mark R Leiser • Systemic Manipulation, Child Vulnerability, and the Regulatory Deficit in Ofcom’s Framework
Prof. Emily M. Bender(she/her) (@emilymbender@dair-community.social)
dair-community.social
When we embrace theories of change that disproportionately favor those positioned to move levers of norms, markets, and code, we need to acknowledge these pitfalls.
Ethan Zuckerman • Mistrust: Why Losing Faith in Institutions Provides the Tools to Transform Them
To be sure, we’re seeing the erosion of the ideal of an employee whose family responsibilities are kept tastefully out of sight.
Joan C. Williams • The Pandemic Has Exposed the Fallacy of the “Ideal Worker”
[6:50] The PR Rule
Elizabeth Filips • How I Consistently Study with a Full Time Job: My Scheduling Formula
human rights technologist Sabrina Hersi Issa,
Beth Pickens • Make Your Art No Matter What: Moving Beyond Creative Hurdles
More central to the heart of governmental responsibility in democracies, however, is the digitization of public services.
Audrey Tang • ⿻ 數位 Plurality: The Future of Collaborative Technology and Democracy
While many tech companies were architected to collect data, they were not necessarily architected to safely store data. Today there’s not just a rift, but a chasm between where data privacy technology, processes, and regulations should be and where they are, thus creating massive amounts of “privacy debt.”