Big Tech companies have recently led and financed projects that claim to use datafication for the “social good.” This article explores what kind of social good it is that this sort of datafication engenders. Drawing mostly on the analysis of corporate public communications and patent applications, it finds that these initiatives hinge on the reconfiguration of social good as datafied, probabilistic, and profitable. These features, the article argues, are better understood within the framework of data colonialism. Rethinking “doing good” as a facet of data colonialism illuminates the inherent harm to freedom these projects produce and why, to “give,” Big Tech must often take away
As World Economic Forum’s definition of personal data as ‘the new “oil” – a valuable resource of the...
International development and humanitarian organizations are increasingly calling for digital data t...
Big data is already creating a big impact. Some herald it as the new ‘data revolution’, others worr...
In recent years, much has been written on ‘big data’ in both the popular and academic press. After t...
In recent years, much has been written on ‘big data\u27 in both the popular and academic press. Afte...
It is almost a truism to argue that data holds a great promise of transformative resources for socia...
With data stockpiles growing exponentially, a bevy of new vistas for data use opens up. The digital ...
Humanity is currently undergoing a large-scale social, economic and legal transformation based on th...
Big Data generated by digital activities, mobile phone use, transactions, crowdsourcing, digitisatio...
This paper is the product of a workshop that brought together practitioners, researchers, and data e...
Peer-reviewedThe modern-day phenomenon of Big Data (i.e. the high-speed generation and storage of a ...
The role that technologies have historically played in producing and reproducing global inequalities...
To date, little attention has been given to the impact of big data in the Global South, about 60% of...
Big Data, perceived as one of the breakthrough technological developments of our times, has the pote...
Digital technologies keep track of everything we do and say while we are online, and we spend online...
As World Economic Forum’s definition of personal data as ‘the new “oil” – a valuable resource of the...
International development and humanitarian organizations are increasingly calling for digital data t...
Big data is already creating a big impact. Some herald it as the new ‘data revolution’, others worr...
In recent years, much has been written on ‘big data’ in both the popular and academic press. After t...
In recent years, much has been written on ‘big data\u27 in both the popular and academic press. Afte...
It is almost a truism to argue that data holds a great promise of transformative resources for socia...
With data stockpiles growing exponentially, a bevy of new vistas for data use opens up. The digital ...
Humanity is currently undergoing a large-scale social, economic and legal transformation based on th...
Big Data generated by digital activities, mobile phone use, transactions, crowdsourcing, digitisatio...
This paper is the product of a workshop that brought together practitioners, researchers, and data e...
Peer-reviewedThe modern-day phenomenon of Big Data (i.e. the high-speed generation and storage of a ...
The role that technologies have historically played in producing and reproducing global inequalities...
To date, little attention has been given to the impact of big data in the Global South, about 60% of...
Big Data, perceived as one of the breakthrough technological developments of our times, has the pote...
Digital technologies keep track of everything we do and say while we are online, and we spend online...
As World Economic Forum’s definition of personal data as ‘the new “oil” – a valuable resource of the...
International development and humanitarian organizations are increasingly calling for digital data t...
Big data is already creating a big impact. Some herald it as the new ‘data revolution’, others worr...