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From Automation to Autonomy: Technological Sovereignty for Better Data Care in Smart Cities
Automation through smart city technology deployments and big data analytics has the potential to create more liveable, sustainable, and equitable cities. However, internationally, there are many examples of smart city developments that have attracted criticism, concerns, and community backlash over issues such as data ethics, privacy, mass surveillance, commodification, and social control. In response, this chapter presents DataCare—a model for cities to practically implement technological sovereignty as a way to renew and maintain the social licence to operate smart city technology. Grounded in a critical review of the literature, the chapter argues that data collection and automation in smart cities must be more citizen and community-oriented. Informed by smart city developments in Toronto and Barcelona, the chapter introduces DataCare—a model for a dedicated facility hosted by the city and offered to citizens, communities, and businesses. The envisaged DataCare space can be tailored to raise awareness of data ethics, to run data literacy training seminars, to engage in participatory data analytics, and to speculate about city data futures. DataCare aims to increase data transparency and autonomy, showcase new business opportunities, and empower citizens and community.
From Automation to Autonomy: Technological Sovereignty for Better Data Care in Smart Cities
Automation through smart city technology deployments and big data analytics has the potential to create more liveable, sustainable, and equitable cities. However, internationally, there are many examples of smart city developments that have attracted criticism, concerns, and community backlash over issues such as data ethics, privacy, mass surveillance, commodification, and social control. In response, this chapter presents DataCare—a model for cities to practically implement technological sovereignty as a way to renew and maintain the social licence to operate smart city technology. Grounded in a critical review of the literature, the chapter argues that data collection and automation in smart cities must be more citizen and community-oriented. Informed by smart city developments in Toronto and Barcelona, the chapter introduces DataCare—a model for a dedicated facility hosted by the city and offered to citizens, communities, and businesses. The envisaged DataCare space can be tailored to raise awareness of data ethics, to run data literacy training seminars, to engage in participatory data analytics, and to speculate about city data futures. DataCare aims to increase data transparency and autonomy, showcase new business opportunities, and empower citizens and community.
From Automation to Autonomy: Technological Sovereignty for Better Data Care in Smart Cities
Advances in 21st Century Human Settlements
Wang, Brydon T. (Herausgeber:in) / Wang, C. M. (Herausgeber:in) / Foth, Marcus (Autor:in) / Anastasiu, Irina (Autor:in) / Mann, Monique (Autor:in) / Mitchell, Peta (Autor:in)
05.01.2021
25 pages
Aufsatz/Kapitel (Buch)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Smart cities , Privacy , Data science , Urban informatics , Urban science , Data governance , Technological sovereignty , Data sovereignty Engineering , Computational Intelligence , Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet) , Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning , Urbanism , Sustainable Development , Building Construction and Design
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