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Exploring Legal Mechanisms for Data Stewardship: Considering Data Foundations

Exploring Legal Mechanisms for Data Stewardship: Considering Data Foundations

Organisations, governments and citizen-driven initiatives around the world aspire to use data to tackle major societal and economic problems, such as combating the COVID-19 pandemic. Realising the potential of data for social good is not an easy task, and from the outset efforts must be made to develop methods for the responsible management of data on behalf of individuals and groups.

The challenges of the twenty-first century demand new data governance models for collectives, governments and organisations that allow data to be shared for individual and public benefit in a responsible way, while managing the harms that may emerge.

Produced by a working group of legal, technical and policy experts, this report describes three legal mechanisms which could help collectives, organisations and governments create flexible governance responses that can respond to different elements of today’s data governance challenge, for example by empowering data subjects to more easily control decisions made about their data by setting clear boundaries on data use, assisting in promoting desirable uses, increasing confidence among organisations to share data or injecting a new democratic element into data policy.

Online Assessment for Ethical AI Released by the EU Commission

On 17 July an online assessment was released called the Assessment List for Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence (ALTAI), which is a practical tool that helps business and organisations to self-assess the trustworthiness of their AI systems under development.

The tool supports the actionability the key requirements outlined by the  Ethics Guidelines for Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence (AI), presented by  the High-Level Expert Group on AI (AI HLEG) presented to the European Commission, in April 2019. The Ethics Guidelines introduced the concept of Trustworthy AI, based on seven key requirements:

  1. human agency and oversight

  2. technical robustness and safety

  3. privacy and data governance

  4. transparency

  5. diversity, non-discrimination and fairness

  6. environmental and societal well-being and

  7. accountability

A Child Named Facebook

The Honour and the Dishonour: Responding to the New Oversight Board

There is an emerging recognition that independent oversight in data governance is a good thing. It’s very early days for Facebook in their narrow focus on some content decisions, but perhaps this is the beginning of something great? Or perhaps not.