Dazza Greenwood , Arkadiusz Stopczynski , Brian Sweatt , Thomas Hardjono , and Alex Pentland , have published The New Deal on Data: A Framework for Institutional Controls , in Julia Lane et al. (Eds.), Privacy, Big Data, and the Public Good: Frameworks for Engagement (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
The chapter describes an approach for giving ordinary people increased control over their personal data, primarily by means of trust networks.
The chapter discusses legal informatics in connection with open Personal Data Store (openPDS), “trust network for computational law,” and UMA (User Managed Access).
Here are two resources on UMA, cited in the chapter:
- The UMA specification: Thomas Hardjono, User-Managed Access (UMA) Profile of OAuth 2.0
- A memo setting out the UMA contractual framework: Eve Maler and Thomas Hardjono: Binding Obligations on User-Managed Access (UMA) Participants
Click here for an earlier post on openPDS.
Filed under: Applications, Articles and papers, Chapters, Policy debates, Technology developments, Technology tools Tagged: Alex Pentland, Arkadiusz Stopczynski, Big data and law, Binding Obligations on User-Managed Access (UMA) Participants, Brian Sweatt, Data privacy, Data privacy information systems, Dazza Greenwood, econtract systems, econtracting systems, econtracts, Eve Maler, Information privacy, Informational privacy, Informational privacy information systems, Julia Lane, Legal trust networks, Modeling contract terms, Modeling contracts, Modeling legal rules, Modeling privacy law rules, open Personal Data Store, openPDS, Privacy Big Data and the Public Good: Frameworks for Engagement, Privacy law information systems, Thomas Hardjono, Trust network for computational law, Trust networks, UMA, User Managed Access, User-Managed Access (UMA) Profile of OAuth 2.0
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