Sort by
Filtered results
- 3 results found
Sort by
Module C: Historical perspective – Attention
This section analyses how different knowledge technologies impact people’s attention and, consequently, their decisions regarding which information is worth storing and remembering, and which is instead forgotten or not even registered in the first place.
Effect of Technology:
Bias, Culture, Epistemic effect, Individuals, Legitimacy, Polarisation
Democratic values:
Deliberation, Transparency
Format:
External link, PDFs
Risks for the use of personal data and user profiling
2.1 Equality
Equality is by-and-large considered both a positive aspect of democracy, and a necessary feature for democracy.
Effect of Technology:
Agency, Bias, Disinformation & Misinformation, Epistemic effect, Inclusion/Exclusion, Individuals, Opacity, Polarisation, Privacy, Society, Surveillance
Democratic values:
Accountability, Deliberation, Equality, Fairness, Participation, Transparency, Trust
Format:
External link
The value of democracy
There are both instrumental and intrinsic reasons to value democracy. In short, democracy is valuable instrumentally because
Effect of Technology:
Agency, Culture, Democracy, Epistemic effect, Inclusion/Exclusion, Individuals, Legitimacy, Opacity, Society
Democratic values:
Accountability, Deliberation, Equality, Fairness, Participation, Pluralism, Rule of Law, Transparency, Trust
Format:
External link