Volume 12, Issue 1
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App stores, antitrust and their links to net neutrality: A review of the European policy and academic debate leading to the EU Digital Markets Act
Christopher T. Marsden, Monash Law School
Ian Brown, Fundação Getulio Vargas
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Humour as an online safety issue: Exploring solutions to help platforms better address this form of expression
Ariadna Matamoros-Fernández, Queensland University of Technology
Louisa Bartolo, Queensland University of Technology
Luke Troynar, Queensland University of Technology
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The web of value
Indrek Ibrus, Tallinn University
Ulrike Rohn, Tallinn University
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Fake accounts on social media, epistemic uncertainty and the need for an independent auditing of accounts
Martin Moore, King's College London
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ChatGPT and the AI Act
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Nicholas Diakopoulos, Northwestern University
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Decentralised social media
Roel Roscam Abbing, Malmö University
Cade Diehm, The New Design Congress
Shahed Warreth, Swansea University
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Governing artificial intelligence in the media and communications sector
Jo Pierson, Hasselt University
Aphra Kerr, Maynooth University
Stephen Cory Robinson, Linköping University
Rosanna Fanni, Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
Valerie Eveline Steinkogler, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Stefania Milan, University of Amsterdam
Giulia Zampedri, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
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The effects on local innovation arising from replicating the GDPR into the Brazilian General Data Protection Law
Renan Gadoni Canaan, University of Ottawa
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Merit and monetisation: A study of video game user-generated content policies
Amy Thomas, University of Glasgow / CREATe
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Political microtargeting: Towards a pragmatic approach
Peter Aagaard, Roskilde University
Selma Marthedal, University of Southern Denmark
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Future-proofing the city: A human rights-based approach to governing algorithmic, biometric and smart city technologies
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EDITORIAL: Future-proofing the city: A human rights-based approach to governing algorithmic, biometric and smart city technologies
Alina Wernick, University of Helsinki
Anna Artyushina, York University
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Substantively smart cities – Participation, fundamental rights and temporality
Philipp Hacker, European University Viadrina Frankfurt
Jürgen Neyer, European University Viadrina Frankfurt
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Preventing long-term risks to human rights in smart cities: A critical review of responsibilities for private AI developers
Lottie Lane, University of Groningen
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Do European smart city developers dream of GDPR-free countries? The pull of global megaprojects in the face of EU smart city compliance and localisation costs
Alina Wernick, University of Helsinki
Emeline Banzuzi, University of Helsinki
Alexander Mörelius-Wulff, University of Helsinki
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Your face is not new to me – Regulating the surveillance power of facial recognition technologies
Giuseppe Mobilio, University of Florence
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The grey-zones of public-private surveillance: Policy tendencies of facial recognition for public security in Brazilian cities
André Ramiro, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Luã Cruz, State University of Campinas (Unicamp)
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Older people and the smart city – Developing inclusive practices to protect and serve a vulnerable population
Aaro Tupasela, University of Helsinki
Juanita Devis Clavijo, Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Metropolitan Solutions
Marjut Salokannel, University of Helsinki
Christoph Fink, University of Helsinki
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Slow-governance in smart cities: An empirical study of smart intersection implementation in four US college towns
Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Brett Frischmann, Villanova University
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Smart cities and cumulative effects on fundamental rights
Athena Christofi, KU Leuven
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Volume 12, Issue 2
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From access and transparency to refusal: Three responses to algorithmic governance
Alexandra James, La Trobe University
Danielle Hynes, University of New South Wales
Andrew Whelan, University of Wollongong
Tanja Dreher, University of New South Wales
Justine Humphry, University of Sydney
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How news media frame data risks in their coverage of big data and AI
Dennis Nguyen, Utrecht University
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Artificial intelligence regulation in the United Kingdom: a path to good governance and global leadership?
Huw Roberts, University of Oxford
Alexander Babuta, British Library
Jessica Morley, University of Oxford
Christopher Thomas, British Library
Mariarosaria Taddeo, University of Oxford
Luciano Floridi, University of Bologna
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The politics of internet freedom rankings
Tetyana Lokot, Dublin City University
Mariëlle Wijermars, Maastricht University
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A platform policy implementation audit of actions against Russia’s state-controlled media
Sofya Glazunova, Queensland University of Technology
Anna Ryzhova, University of Passau
Axel Bruns, Queensland University of Technology
Silvia Ximena Montaña-Niño, Queensland University of Technology
Arista Beseler, University of Passau
Ehsan Dehghan, Queensland University of Technology
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Voting in online surveys on open government policies in Moldova and Ukraine
Dmytro Khutkyy, University of Tartu
Olga Matveieva, Dnipro University of Technology
Diana Mirza-Grisco, Independent researcher
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Online but still falling behind: measuring barriers to internet use ‘after access’
Kevin Hernandez, University of Sussex
Becky Faith, University of Sussex
Volume 12, Issue 3
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From brand safety to suitability: advertisers in platform governance
Rachel Griffin, Paris Institute of Political Studies
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Identifying potential emerging human rights implications in Chinese smart cities via machine-learning aided patent analysis
Joss Wright, University of Oxford
Valentin Weber, German Council on Foreign Relations
Gregory Finn Walton, SecDev Group
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The transformation of surveillance in the digitalisation discourse of the OECD: a brief genealogy
Michaela Padden, Karlstad University
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Data protection beyond data rights: governing data production through collective intermediaries
Jamie Duncan, University of Toronto
Volume 12, Issue 4
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Accountability and platforms' governance: the case of online prominence of public service media content
Krisztina Rozgonyi, Austrian Academy of Sciences
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Misinformation
Jing Zeng, Utrecht University
Scott Babwah Brennen, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Digital organising
Stephan Bohn, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Ali Aslan Gümüsay, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Georg von Richthofen, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Georg Reischauer, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
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Dis/Trust and data-driven technologies
David Duenas-Cid, Gdańsk University of Technology
Stefano Calzati, Delft University of Technology
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A complicated picture: Media diversity in the case of Google’s video search during the pandemic
Qun Wang, Fordham University
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Regulatory capacity capture: The United Kingdom’s online safety regime
Lisa-Maria Neudert, University of Oxford
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Navigating the AI frontier: European parliamentary insights on bias and regulation, preceding the AI Act
Allessia Chiappetta, York University
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Government responses to online disinformation unpacked
Samuel Cipers, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Trisha Meyer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Jonas Lefevere, University of Antwerp