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List of contents
Introduction; 1. Personal information as a knowledge commons resources Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo, Brett Frischmann and Katherine J. Strandburg; 2. How private individuals maintain privacy and govern their own health data cooperative: MIDATA in Switzerland Felix Gille and Effy Vayena; 3. Pooling mental health data with Chatbots Michael Mattioli; 4. Privacy in practice: a socio-technical integration research (STIR) study of rules-in-use within institutional research Kyle M. L. Jones and Chase McCoy; 5. Public Facebook groups for political activism Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Katherine J. Strandburg; 6. The republic of letters and the origins of scientific knowledge commons Michael J. Madison; 7. Privacy and knowledge production across contexts Brett Frischmann, Katherine Haenschen and Ari Ezra Waldman; 8. Governing the internet of everything Scott J. Shackelford; 9. Contextual integrity as a gauge for governing knowledge commons Yan Shvartzshnaider, Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo and Noah Apthorpe; 10. Designing for the privacy commons Darakhshan J. Mir; Conclusion.
About the author
Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo is an Assistant Professor at the School of Information Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She studies sociotechnical governance, broadly exploring privacy, inequality, and political consequences of information technology. She is the co-author of three previous books: Online Trolling and Its Perpetrators: Under the Cyberbridge (2016); Social Informatics Evolving (2015); and Multiculturalism and Information and Communication Technology (2013).Brett M. Frischmann is the Charles Widger Endowed University Professor in Law, Business and Economics, at Villanova University. He is also an affiliated scholar of the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School and a trustee for the Nexa Center for Internet and Society, Politecnico di Torino. Specializing in intellectual property and Internet law, he is the co-author of Re-Engineering Humanity with Evan Selinger (2018). He has also published foundational books on the relationships among infrastructural resources, governance, commons, and spillovers, including Governing Medical Knowledge Commons, with Michael Madison and Katherine Strandburg (2017); Governing Knowledge Commons, with Michael Madison and Katherine Strandburg (2014); and Infrastructure: The Social Value of Shared Resources (2012).Katherine J. Strandburg is the Albert Engelberg Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. She directs New York University's Information Law Institute and interdisciplinary Privacy Research Group and is a faculty director of the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law and Policy. Professor Strandburg co-developed the Governing Knowledge Commons framework and researches information privacy, automated decision-making, patents, and innovation policy. Before obtaining her JD, she was a computational physicist at Argonne National Laboratory.
Summary
Scholars from various disciplines explore privacy governance using the Governing Knowledge Commons framework. Case studies drawn from contexts such as academia, social media, mental health, and IoT provide insights into how privacy shapes community knowledge production. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Additional text
'The increasing ability to record and store our actions, opinions, health data, images, etc. lead to important questions how to govern privacy. Governing Privacy in Knowledge Commons views privacy as a problem of collective action. This book provides a fresh perspective, applying the Institutional Analysis and Development framework of Elinor Ostrom, and the Governing Knowledge Commons framework of the editors to a diverse set of knowledge commons case studies.' Marco Janssen, Arizona State University