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Browsing by Subject "Democracy"

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  • Pfau, Diana Victoria (2021)
    Surveillance Capitalism, as described by Shoshana Zuboff, is a mutation of capitalism in which the main commodity to be traded is behavioural surplus, or personal data. As the forming of Surveillance Capitalism was significantly furthered by Artificial Intelligence (AI), AI is a central topic of the thesis. Personalisation that will oftentimes involve the use of AI tools is based on the collection of big amounts of personal data and bears several risks for data subjects. In Chapter I, I introduce the underlying research questions: Firstly, the question which effects the use of AI in Surveillance Capitalism has on democracy in the light of personalisation of advertisement, news provision, and propaganda. Secondly, the question whether the European Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union react to these effects appropriately or if there is still need for additional legislation. In Chapter II, I determined a working definition of Artificial Intelligence. Additionally, the applicability of the GDPR together with potential problems are introduced. A special focus here lays on the underlying rationale of the GDPR. This topic is evaluated on several occasions during the thesis and reveals that the focus of the GDPR on enabling the data subject to exercise control over his or her information conflicts with the underlying rationale of Surveillance Capitalism. In Chapter III, four steps of examination follow. In a first step,I introduce the concept of Surveillance Capitalism. Personalized advertisement together with consent as a legal basis for processing of personal data are examined. During this examination, profiling, inferences, and the data processing principles of the GDPR are explored in the context of personalisation and AI. A focus in this examination is the question how individuals and democracy can be impacted. It is found that there is a lack of protection when it comes to the use of consent as a legal basis for privacy intrusive personalized advertisement and it is likely that the data subject will not be able to make an informed decision when asked for consent. Data minimisation, purpose limitation and storage limitation as important data processing principles proof to be at odds with the application of Artificial intelligence in the context of personalisation. Especially when it comes to the deletion of data further research in AI will be necessary to enable the adherence to the storage limitation.In a second step, I examined personalized news and propaganda according to their potential impacts on individuals and democracy. Explicit consent as a legal basis for processing of special categories is examined together with the concept of data protection by design as stipulated in article 25 GDPR. While explicit consent is found to likely suffer from the same weaknesses as the “regular consent”, I proposed that data protection by design could solve some of the arising issues if the norm is strengthened in the future.In a third step, I evaluate whether the right to receive and impart information laid down in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union provides for a right to receive unbiased, or unpersonalized, information. While there are indications that such a right could be acknowledged however, its scope is unclear so far. In a fourth step, I examine the proposal for a European Artificial Intelligence Act with the unfortunate outcome, that this Act might not be able to fill the discovered gaps left by the GDPR. I conclude that, taking into consideration all findings of the research, the use of AI in personalisation can significantly harm democracy by potentially impacting the freedom of political discourse, provoking social inequalities, and influencing legislation and science through heavy investment and lobbying. Ultimately, the GDPR does leave significant gaps due to the incompatibility of underlying rationales of the GDPR and Surveillance Capitalism and there is a need to protect data subjects additionally. I propose that future legislations on the use of AI in personalization should react appropriately to the rationale of Surveillance Capitalism.