Effectively regulating the domestic Internet of Things (IoT) requires a turn to technology design. However, the role of designers as regulators still needs to be situated. By drawing on a specific domain of technology design, human–computer interaction (HCI), we unpack what an HCI-led approach can offer IT law. By reframing the three prominent design concepts of provenance, affordances and trajectories, we offer new perspectives on the regulatory challenges of the domestic IoT. Our HCI concepts orientate us towards the social context of technology. We argue that novel regulatory strategies can emerge through a better understanding of the relationships and interactions between designers, end users and technology. Accordingly, closer future a...
Technology law scholars have recently started to consider the theories of affordance and technologic...
Artificial intelligence has been generating inventive output for decades, and now the continued and ...
International audienceThis article positions itself beyond the tension between copyright enforcement...
Effectively regulating the domestic Internet of Things (IoT) requires a turn to technology design. H...
This thesis investigates the role of technology designers in regulation. Emerging information techno...
In this paper, we question the role of information technology (IT) designers in IT regulation. Throu...
In the past 25 years, legal thought has considerably evolved. Traditional narratives have been suppl...
Within this chapter we consider the emergence of ambient domestic computing systems, both conceptual...
Internet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies is the most...
Intellectual property is a key, albeit overlooked, issue when it comes to the Internet of Things (Io...
The contribution to Oxford Enclopaedia broadly discusses the information technologies and technologi...
Among legal scholars of technology, it has become commonplace to acknowledge that the design of netw...
This article presents our interdisciplinary analysis of end-user license agreements and privacy poli...
The regulatory climate is in a process of change. Design, having been implicated for some time, is n...
In recent years, an extraordinary growth in activities among legal scholars and legal practitioners ...
Technology law scholars have recently started to consider the theories of affordance and technologic...
Artificial intelligence has been generating inventive output for decades, and now the continued and ...
International audienceThis article positions itself beyond the tension between copyright enforcement...
Effectively regulating the domestic Internet of Things (IoT) requires a turn to technology design. H...
This thesis investigates the role of technology designers in regulation. Emerging information techno...
In this paper, we question the role of information technology (IT) designers in IT regulation. Throu...
In the past 25 years, legal thought has considerably evolved. Traditional narratives have been suppl...
Within this chapter we consider the emergence of ambient domestic computing systems, both conceptual...
Internet of Things and the Law: Legal Strategies for Consumer-Centric Smart Technologies is the most...
Intellectual property is a key, albeit overlooked, issue when it comes to the Internet of Things (Io...
The contribution to Oxford Enclopaedia broadly discusses the information technologies and technologi...
Among legal scholars of technology, it has become commonplace to acknowledge that the design of netw...
This article presents our interdisciplinary analysis of end-user license agreements and privacy poli...
The regulatory climate is in a process of change. Design, having been implicated for some time, is n...
In recent years, an extraordinary growth in activities among legal scholars and legal practitioners ...
Technology law scholars have recently started to consider the theories of affordance and technologic...
Artificial intelligence has been generating inventive output for decades, and now the continued and ...
International audienceThis article positions itself beyond the tension between copyright enforcement...