Presented at
May Contain Hackers (MCH2022),
July 25, 2022, 7 p.m.
(50 minutes).
The use of data is accelerating, not only owing to increasing technical possibilities like AI and earth observation, but also as a result of crises such as COVID-19 and climate change which accelerate the deployment of data and technology. This is happening on a small and local scale, as well as on a large and global one. Precisely because these data are potentially personal, and its use is becoming commonplace, it is urgent to internalize shared principles for the responsible use of data to achieve greater common value, better data and better products. These are preferably intrinsic principles that guarantee the safety and privacy of people, our social values and human dignity. In this talk we discuss an ethical framework for the use of location data. Together with the crowd we will investigate several dilemma's in which location data play an important role. How far can you go? Which values are more important? These are the kind of questions we will present and discuss.
The ethical framework is designed for the use of (personal) location data.
How do we ensure that the technology we develop is at the service of society? How do we respect shared public values and the individual rights when developing applications made possible by location data? With the discussions that have erupted around apps for monitoring the COVID-19 pandemic, it is clear that the answers to these questions are not crystal clear.
The purpose of the ethical reference is to inspire data users, but also policy makers and decision makers to help them collect, use and apply personal location data responsibly. Location data are all data that show where people are located and how they move, whether or not they can be traced. This data can, for example, be collected via mobile apps.
In this talk we discuss the different values that are conflicting in the use of location data. We present several dilemma's and cases and will involve the public actively in discussing these dilemma's.
You can find a concept of the ethical framework at https://www.geonovum.nl/themas/geo4covid/ethical-framework
In our work looking for responsible use of spatial data we are working together with W3C: https://w3c.github.io/sdw/responsible-use/
Presenters:
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Emily Daemen
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Frank Verschoor
Frank Verschoor knows the key factors in data: the people, their mindset and how they handle data. Since 2009 he helps public organisations across The Netherlands to become more open ones. He does this by asking the difficult questions, not taking the status quo for granted and being creative in complex and bureaucratic environments.
Frank works for local and regional governments and is currently developing the ethical framework for location data together with Geonovum. Frank is a partner at open data company The Green Land, which focuses on the transparent and responsible use
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