TRANSPARENCY AS A PUBLIC GOOD.

 


Increased reliance on digital services means that citizens often unknowingly share private information and data in exchange for free services. Individuals’ data leaves behind a “digital footprint” that can be analysed in real time or ex-post by hostile and illegitimate actors. Moreover, data held by Internet and cybersurveillance companies about personal lives can often be obtained by authorities without adequate due process or transparency. 




There is a growing global push encouraging more transparency regarding how Internet companies exploit citizens’ data, how it informs predictive models and artificial intelligence, and enables amplification of disinformation and hatred. 



This was underlined in the Windhoek+30 Declaration call for technology companies to “work to ensure transparency in relation to their human and automated systems”.




 Relevant here are UNESCO’s set of principles to enhance the transparency of internet platform companies, which will be discussed as an additional tool to understand what data is collected and what impact it has on the safety of journalists and the public at large.



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