Data and The Right to Ignorance
Data and The Right to Ignorance
H/T Antonio Gallo
Who owns our data? How do we control a decision not to know? What is the economic value of our data?
Many questions, partial answers, and a view toward the future.
The Economist has written that the world’s most valuable resource is no longer oil—it’s data. But data is very different from oil. Data is an unlimited resource, it’s owned by individuals, and it’s best exchanged without any transactional economic value.
Originally shared by Antonio Gallo
In an age of all-knowing algorithms, how do we choose not to know?
In un'epoca algoritmica nella quale crediamo di sapere tutto, come facciamo a non scegliere ciò che non ci serve?
http://nautil.us/issue/61/coordinates/we-need-to-save-ignorance-from-ai
H/T Antonio Gallo
Who owns our data? How do we control a decision not to know? What is the economic value of our data?
Many questions, partial answers, and a view toward the future.
The Economist has written that the world’s most valuable resource is no longer oil—it’s data. But data is very different from oil. Data is an unlimited resource, it’s owned by individuals, and it’s best exchanged without any transactional economic value.
Originally shared by Antonio Gallo
In an age of all-knowing algorithms, how do we choose not to know?
In un'epoca algoritmica nella quale crediamo di sapere tutto, come facciamo a non scegliere ciò che non ci serve?
http://nautil.us/issue/61/coordinates/we-need-to-save-ignorance-from-ai
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