Volume 13, Issue 1
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Navigating the EU data governance labyrinth: A business perspective on data sharing in the financial sector
Eugénie Coche, University of Amsterdam
Ans Kolk, University of Amsterdam
Martijn Dekker, University of Amsterdam
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Navigating vulnerability markets and bug bounty programs: A public policy perspective
Aviram Zrahia, Tel Aviv University
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Governing Chinese technologies: TikTok, foreign interference, and technological sovereignty
Ausma Bernot, Griffith University
Diarmuid Cooney-O'Donoghue, University of Warwick
Monique Mann, Victoria University of Wellington
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Regulating high-reach AI: On transparency directions in the Digital Services Act
Kasia Söderlund, Lund University
Emma Engström, Institute for Futures Studies
Kashyap Haresamudram, Lund University
Stefan Larsson, Lund University
Pontus Strimling, Institute for Futures Studies
Volume 13, Issue 2
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The death of privacy policies: How app stores shape GDPR compliance of apps
Julia Krämer, Erasmus University Rotterdam
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Data commons
Gijs van Maanen, Tilburg University
Charlotte Ducuing, KU Leuven
Tommaso Fia, University of Tübingen
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Interoperability
Chris Berg, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT University)
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Consensus techniques
Steve Jankowski, University of Amsterdam
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Hacktivism
Hanna Gawel, Jagiellonian University
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Data cooperative
Alexander Fink, Augsburg University
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Decentralised content moderation
Paul Friedl, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Julian Morgan, Humboldt Universität Berlin
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Mitigating information asymmetry in 5G networks
Hermann Bergmann Garcia e Silva, Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto (FEUP)
Rúben Manuel Nunes Santos, Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto (FEUP)
Manuel Ricardo, Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto (FEUP)
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SPECIAL ISSUE
Locating and theorising platform power
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EDITORIAL: Introduction to the special issue on Locating and theorising platform power
David Nieborg, University of Toronto
Thomas Poell, University of Amsterdam
Robyn Caplan, Duke University
José van Dijck, Utrecht University
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The platform behind the curtain: Obfuscated brokerage on retail trading platforms
Andreas Gregersen, University of Copenhagen
Jacob Ørmen, University of Copenhagen
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Monitoring infrastructural power: Methodological challenges in studying mobile infrastructures for datafication
Stine Lomborg, University of Copenhagen
Kristian Sick, University of Copenhagen
Sofie Flensburg, University of Copenhagen
Signe Sophus Lai, University of Copenhagen
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Platform power in AI: The evolution of cloud infrastructures in the political economy of artificial intelligence
Dieuwertje Luitse, University of Amsterdam
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Observing “tuned” advertising on digital platforms
Nicholas Carah, University of Queensland
Lauren Hayden, University of Queensland
Maria-Gemma Brown, University of Queensland
Daniel Angus, Queensland University of Technology
Aimee Brownbill, Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education
Kiah Hawker, University of Queensland
Xue Ying Tan, Queensland University of Technology
Amy Dobson, Curtin University
Brady Robards, Monash University
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Protocol power: Matter, IoT interoperability, and a critique of industry self-regulation
Colin Crawford, Concordia University
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Platform lobbying: Policy influence strategies and the EU's Digital Services Act
Robert Gorwa, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
Grzegorz Lechowski, Freie Universität Berlin
Daniel Schneiß, Kiel University
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Copyright callouts and the promise of creator-driven platform governance
Blake Hallinan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
CJ Reynolds, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Omer Rothenstein, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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The contingencies of platform power and risk management in the gig economy
Niels van Doorn, University of Amsterdam
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Platforms´ regulatory disruptiveness and local regulatory outcomes in Europe
Eliska Drapalova, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)
Kai Wegrich, Hertie School
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How platform power undermines diversity-oriented innovation
Paula Helm, University of Amsterdam
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Volume 13, Issue 3
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The European approach to regulating AI through technical standards
Mélanie Gornet, Institut Polytechnique de Paris
Winston Maxwell, Institut Polytechnique de Paris
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Estonia’s digital diplomacy: Nordic interoperability and the challenges of cross-border e-governance
Alex Hardy, University of Liverpool
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But did they really? Platforms’ compliance with the Code of Practice on Disinformation in review
Stephan Mündges, TU Dortmund University
Kirsty Park, European Digital Media Observatory
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Blocking the information war? Testing the effectiveness of the EU’s censorship of Russian state propaganda among the fringe communities of Western Europe
Christiern Santos Okholm, European University Institute
Amir Ebrahimi Fard, Maastricht University
Marijn ten Thij, Maastricht University
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General-purpose AI regulation and the European Union AI Act
Oskar J. Gstrein, University of Groningen
Noman Haleem, University of Groningen
Andrej Zwitter, University of Groningen
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Fulfilling data access obligations: How could (and should) platforms facilitate data donation studies?
Valerie Hase, LMU Munich
Jef Ausloos, University of Amsterdam
Laura Boeschoten, Utrecht University
Nico Pfiffner, University of Zurich
Heleen Janssen, University of Amsterdam
Theo Araujo, University of Amsterdam
Thijs Carrière, Utrecht University
Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
Jörg Haßler, LMU Munich
Felicia Loecherbach, University of Amsterdam
Zoltán Kmetty, Centre for Social Sciences
Judith Möller, University of Hamburg – Leibniz Institute for Media Research (HBI)
Jakob Ohme, Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society
Elisabeth Schmidbauer, LMU Munich
Bella Struminskaya, Utrecht University
Damian Trilling, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Kasper Welbers, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Mario Haim, LMU Munich
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The unusual DAO: An ethnography of building trust in “trustless” spaces
Tara Merk, French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)/University of Paris II
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SPECIAL ISSUE
AI systems for the public interest
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EDITORIAL: Introduction to the special issue on AI systems for the public interest
Theresa Züger, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
Hadi Asghari, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
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Contesting the public interest in AI governance
Tegan Cohen, Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
Nicolas P. Suzor, Queensland University of Technology (QUT)
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Balancing public interest, fundamental rights, and innovation: The EU’s governance model for non-high-risk AI systems
Michael Gille, Hamburg University of Applied Science
Marina Tropmann-Frick, Hamburg University of Applied Science
Thorben Schomacker, Hamburg University of Applied Science
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Restricting access to AI decision-making in the public interest: The justificatory role of proportionality and its balancing factors
Margaret Warthon, University of Groningen
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Navigating data governance risks: Facial recognition in law enforcement under EU legislation
Gizem Gültekin-Várkonyi, University of Szeged
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Public value in the making of automated and datafied welfare futures
Doris Allhutter, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Anila Alushi, University of Leipzig
Rafaela Cavalcanti de Alcântara, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Maris Männiste, Södertörn University
Christian Pentzold, University of Leipzig
Sebastian Sosnowski, Polish Academy of Sciences
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Balancing efficiency and public interest: The impact of AI automation on social benefit provision in Brazil
Maria Alejandra Nicolás, Federal University of Latin American Integration
Rafael Cardoso Sampaio, Federal University of Paraná
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Misguided: AI regulation needs a shift in focus
Agathe Balayn, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
Seda Gürses, Delft University of Technology (TU Delft)
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On the (im)possibility of sustainable artificial intelligence
Rainer Rehak, Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society
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Interview with Katharina Meyer: On the tension between public interest and profit maximisation in public interest tech
Theresa Züger, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
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Interview with Friederike Rohde: The environmental impact of AI as a public interest concern
Theresa Züger, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
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Interview with Ulrike Klinger and Philipp Hacker: Why the public interest gets lost in the AI gold rush
Theresa Züger, Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
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Volume 13, Issue 4
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Accountability protocols? On-chain dynamics in blockchain governance
Kelsie Nabben, European University Institute
Primavera De Filippi, National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS)
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Discrimination grounds and personalised pricing: Consumer perceptions of fairness, norm alignment, legality, and trust in markets
Kimia Heidary, Leiden University
Jean-Pierre van der Rest, Leiden University
Bart Custers, Leiden University
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AI-generated journalism: Do the transparency provisions in the AI Act give news readers what they hope for?
Stanislaw Piasecki, University of Amsterdam
Sophie Morosoli, University of Amsterdam
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Laurens Naudts, University of Amsterdam
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Resistance in the data-driven society
Stefania Milan, University of Amsterdam
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Between the cracks: Blind spots in regulating media concentration and platform dependence in the EU
Theresa Josephine Seipp, University of Amsterdam
Natali Helberger, University of Amsterdam
Claes de Vreese, University of Amsterdam
Jef Ausloos, University of Amsterdam
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(Un)disclosed brand partnerships: How platform policies and interfaces shape commercial content for influencers
Taylor Annabell, Utrecht University
Laura Aade, University of Luxembourg
Catalina Goanta, Utrecht University
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Machinery of dissent: Exploring the techno-social practices of modern protests
Alesia Rudnik, Karlstad University