Sustainable data ecologies in the European City: Risk Perceptions of Users and Good Practice Advice for DataDriven Organizations

DossierHBOPD.2018.02.043
StatusAfgerond
Subsidie€ 80.000
Startdatum1 oktober 2019
Einddatum10 juni 2022
RegelingHbo-postdoc 2018-2022
Thema's
  • Kunst en de creatieve industrie
  • Veerkrachtige samenleving: in wijk, stad en regio
  • Creatieve industrie
  • Waardecreatie door verantwoorde toegang tot en gebruik van big data
  • Smart, liveable cities
  • Op weg naar veerkrachtige samenlevingen
  • Sociale Studies
  • Economie

This project researches risk perceptions about data, technology, and digital transformation in society and how to build trust between organisations and users to ensure sustainable data ecologies. The aim is to understand the user role in a tech-driven environment and her perception of the resulting relationships with organisations that offer data-driven services/products. The discourse on digital transformation is productive but does not truly address the user’s attitudes and awareness (Kitchin 2014). Companies are not aware enough of the potential accidents and resulting loss of trust that undermine data ecologies and, consequently, forfeit their beneficial potential. Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica-situation, for instance, led to 42% of US adults deleting their accounts and the company losing billions.
Social, political, and economic interactions are increasingly digitalised, which comes with hands-on benefits but also challenges privacy, individual well-being and a fair society. User awareness of organisational practices is of heightened importance, as vulnerabilities for users equal vulnerabilities for data ecologies. Without transparency and a new “social contract” for a digital society, problems are inevitable. Recurring scandals about data leaks and biased algorithms are just two examples that illustrate the urgency of this research. Properly informing users about an organisation’s data policies makes a crucial difference (Accenture 2018) and for them to develop sustainable business models, organisations need to understand what users expect and how to communicate with them. This research project tackles this issue head-on.
First, a deeper understanding of users’ risk perception is needed to formulate concrete policy recommendations aiming to educate and build trust. Second, insights about users’ perceptions will inform guidelines. Through empirical research on framing in the data discourse, user types, and trends in organisational practice, the project develops concrete advice - for users and practitioners alike - on building sustainable relationships in a resilient digital society.

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