This article explores the governance by algorithms in information societies. Theoretically, it builds on (co-)evolutionary innovation studies in order to adequately grasp the interplay of technological and societal change and combines these with institutional approaches to incorporate governance by technology or rather software as institutions. Methodologically, it draws from an empirical survey of Internet-based services that rely on automated algorithmic selection, a functional typology derived from it, and an analysis of associated potential social risks. It shows how algorithmic selection has become a growing source of social order, of a shared social reality in information societies. It argues that – similar to the construction of real...
We are in the interim of the massive expansion of the new and fundamental technology, which is repre...
Algorithmic selection forms the techno-functional core of a number of Internet services and finds ap...
Algorithmic governance affects individuals’ reality construction and consequently social order in so...
This paper focuses on the governing effects of Internet algorithms in information societies. It anal...
Internet-based services that build on automated algorithmic selection processes, for example search...
In a digitised society, algorithms are fulfilling the function of policies as they constitute the ru...
Algorithmic agents permeate every instant of our online existence. Based on our digital profiles bui...
In our information societies, tasks and decisions are increasingly outsourced to automated systems, ...
This chapter seeks to make sense of automated decision-making and the role of humans in it by zoomin...
Our everyday practices are increasingly mediated through online technologies, entailing the navigati...
The term algorithmic governance describes institutional steering effects of algorithmic‐selection ap...
The article tackles the problem of the existence of algorithms in selected services and the Internet...
This thematic issue invited submissions that address the opportunities and controversies related to ...
The Internet is increasingly permeating daily life with an essential and structuring bundle of innov...
In a 2014 article, Professor Shawn Bayern demonstrated that anyone can confer legal personhood on an...
We are in the interim of the massive expansion of the new and fundamental technology, which is repre...
Algorithmic selection forms the techno-functional core of a number of Internet services and finds ap...
Algorithmic governance affects individuals’ reality construction and consequently social order in so...
This paper focuses on the governing effects of Internet algorithms in information societies. It anal...
Internet-based services that build on automated algorithmic selection processes, for example search...
In a digitised society, algorithms are fulfilling the function of policies as they constitute the ru...
Algorithmic agents permeate every instant of our online existence. Based on our digital profiles bui...
In our information societies, tasks and decisions are increasingly outsourced to automated systems, ...
This chapter seeks to make sense of automated decision-making and the role of humans in it by zoomin...
Our everyday practices are increasingly mediated through online technologies, entailing the navigati...
The term algorithmic governance describes institutional steering effects of algorithmic‐selection ap...
The article tackles the problem of the existence of algorithms in selected services and the Internet...
This thematic issue invited submissions that address the opportunities and controversies related to ...
The Internet is increasingly permeating daily life with an essential and structuring bundle of innov...
In a 2014 article, Professor Shawn Bayern demonstrated that anyone can confer legal personhood on an...
We are in the interim of the massive expansion of the new and fundamental technology, which is repre...
Algorithmic selection forms the techno-functional core of a number of Internet services and finds ap...
Algorithmic governance affects individuals’ reality construction and consequently social order in so...