Volume 8, Issue 1
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Does everyone have a price? Understanding people’s attitude towards online and offline price discrimination
Joost Poort, University of Amsterdam
Frederik J. Zuiderveen Borgesius, Radboud University
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Practicing rights and values in internet policy around the world
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EDITORIAL: Communication and internet policy: a critical rights-based history and future
Aphra Kerr, Maynooth University
Francesca Musiani, National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Julia Pohle, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
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Data and digital rights: recent Australian developments
Gerard Goggin, University of Sydney
Ariadne Vromen, University of Sydney
Kimberlee Weatherall, University of Sydney
Fiona Martin, University of Sydney
Lucy Sunman, University of Sydney
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Operationalising communication rights: the case of a “digital welfare state”
Marko Ala-Fossi, Tampere University
Anette Alén-Savikko, University of Helsinki
Jockum Hildén, University of Helsinki
Minna Aslama Horowitz, University of Helsinki
Johanna Jääsaari, University of Helsinki
Kari Karppinen, University of Helsinki
Katja Lehtisaari, University of Helsinki
Hannu Nieminen, University of Helsinki
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Counter-terrorism in Ethiopia: manufacturing insecurity, monopolizing speech
Téwodros W. Workneh, Kent State University
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Empire and the megamachine: comparing two controversies over social media content
Steph Hill, University of Leicester
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Beyond ‘zero sum’: the case for context in regulating zero rating in the global South
Guy Thurston Hoskins, York University
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Volume 8, Issue 2
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Reading between the lines and the numbers: an analysis of the first NetzDG reports
Amélie Heldt, Hans-Bredow-Institut
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Net neutrality regulation and the participatory condition
Tamara Shepherd, University of Calgary
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Making sense of data ethics. The powers behind the data ethics debate in European policymaking
Gry Hasselbalch, University of Copenhagen
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Knocking on Heaven’s Door: User preferences on digital cultural distribution
Joan-Josep Vallbé, University of Barcelona
Balázs Bodó, University of Amsterdam
João P. Quintais, University of Amsterdam
Christian W. Handke, Erasmus University Rotterdam
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Regulation through “bricking”: private ordering in the “Internet of Things”
Natasha Tusikov, York University
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Transnational materialities
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EDITORIAL: The recursivity of internet governance research
José van Dijck, Utrecht University
Bernhard Rieder, University of Amsterdam
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The platform governance triangle: conceptualising the informal regulation of online content
Robert Gorwa, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
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How US-made rules shape internet governance in China
Natasha Tusikov, York University
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Citizen or consumer? Contrasting Australia and Europe’s data protection policies
James Meese, University of Technology Sydney
Punit Jagasia, University of Technology Sydney
James Arvanitakis, Western Sydney University
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Technology, autonomy, and manipulation
Daniel Susser, Pennsylvania State University
Beate Roessler, University of Amsterdam
Helen Nissenbaum, Cornell Tech
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Making data colonialism liveable: how might data’s social order be regulated?
Nick Couldry, London School of Economics & Political Science
Ulises A. Mejias, State University of New York at Oswego
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Zombie contracts, dark patterns of design, and ‘documentisation’
Kristin B. Cornelius, University of California, Los Angeles
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The ‘golden view’: data-driven governance in the scoring society
Lina Dencik, Cardiff University
Joanna Redden, Cardiff University
Arne Hintz, Cardiff University
Harry Warne, Cardiff University
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Reframing platform power
José van Dijck, Utrecht University
David Nieborg, University of Toronto
Thomas Poell, University of Amsterdam
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A guideline for understanding and measuring algorithmic governance in everyday life
Michael Latzer, University of Zurich
Noemi Festic, University of Zurich
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Mediated democracy – Linking digital technology to political agency
Jeanette Hofmann, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
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The algorithmic dance: YouTube’s Adpocalypse and the gatekeeping of cultural content on digital platforms
Sangeet Kumar, Denison University
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Volume 8, Issue 3
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New perspectives on ethics and the laws of artificial intelligence
Eduardo Magrani, FGV Law School; Ibmec; PUC-Rio
Volume 8, Issue 4
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Platform ad archives: promises and pitfalls
Paddy Leerssen, University of Amsterdam
Jef Ausloos, University of Amsterdam
Brahim Zarouali, University of Amsterdam
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
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Tax compliance and privacy rights in profiling and automated decision making
Luisa Scarcella, University of Graz
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Defining concepts of the digital society
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EDITORIAL: Defining concepts of the digital society
Christian Katzenbach, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Thomas Christian Bächle, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
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Algorithmic governance
Christian Katzenbach, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Lena Ulbricht, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
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Platformisation
Thomas Poell, University of Amsterdam
David Nieborg, University of Toronto
José van Dijck, Utrecht University
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Filter bubble
Axel Bruns, Queensland University of Technology
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Privacy
Tobias Matzner, University Paderborn
Carsten Ochs, Universität Kassel
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Datafication
Ulises A. Mejias, State University of New York at Oswego
Nick Couldry, London School of Economics & Political Science
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Data-driven elections
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EDITORIAL: Data-driven elections: implications and challenges for democratic societies
Colin J. Bennett, University of Victoria
David Lyon, Queen's University
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The digital commercialisation of US politics — 2020 and beyond
Jeff Chester, Center for Digital Democracy
Kathryn C. Montgomery, American University
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Data campaigning: between empirics and assumptions
Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham University
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WhatsApp and political instability in Brazil: targeted messages and political radicalisation
Rafael Evangelista, State University of Campinas (Unicamp)
Fernanda Bruno, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ)
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Unpacking the “European approach” to tackling challenges of disinformation and political manipulation
Iva Nenadić, University of Zagreb
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The regulation of online political micro-targeting in Europe
Tom Dobber, University of Amsterdam
Ronan Ó Fathaigh, University of Amsterdam
Frederik J. Zuiderveen Borgesius, Radboud University
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Voter preferences, voter manipulation, voter analytics: policy options for less surveillance and more autonomy
Jacquelyn Burkell, THe University of Western Ontario
Priscilla M. Regan, George Mason University
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Platform transience: changes in Facebook’s policies, procedures, and affordances in global electoral politics
Bridget Barrett, University of North Carolina
Daniel Kreiss, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Cranks, clickbait and cons: on the acceptable use of political engagement platforms
Fenwick McKelvey, Concordia University
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Disinformation optimised: gaming search engine algorithms to amplify junk news
Samantha Bradshaw, Oxford Internet Institute
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On the edge of glory (…or catastrophe): regulation, transparency and party democracy in data-driven campaigning in Québec
Eric Montigny, Université Laval
Philippe Dubois, Université du Québec
Thierry Giasson, Université Laval
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Data-driven political campaigns in practice: understanding and regulating diverse data-driven campaigns
Katharine Dommett, University of Sheffield
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Big data and democracy: a regulator’s perspective
Michael P. McEvoy, Information and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia
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Towards a holistic perspective on personal data and the data-driven election paradigm
Varoon Bashyakarla, Tactical Tech
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