Open Journal of Philosophy

Volume 8, Issue 3 (May 2018)

ISSN Print: 2163-9434   ISSN Online: 2163-9442

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.38  Citations  

Personal Data v. Big Data: Challenges of Commodification of Personal Data

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 368KB)  PP. 206-215  
DOI: 10.4236/ojpp.2018.83015    2,055 Downloads   5,378 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Any firm today may, at little or no cost, build its own infrastructure to process personal data for commercial, economic, political, technological or any other purposes. Society has, therefore, turned into a privacy-unfriendly environment. The processing of personal data is essential for multiple economically and socially useful purposes, such as health care, education or terrorism prevention. But firms view personal data as a commodity, as a valuable asset, and heavily invest in processing for private gains. This article studies the potential to subject personal data to trade secret rules, so as to ensure the users’ control over their data without limiting the data’s free movement, and examines some positive scenarios of attributing commercial value to personal data.

Share and Cite:

Bottis, M. and Bouchagiar, G. (2018) Personal Data v. Big Data: Challenges of Commodification of Personal Data. Open Journal of Philosophy, 8, 206-215. doi: 10.4236/ojpp.2018.83015.

Cited by

[1] The Map of Healthtech in Indonesia As Database for Future Research
Jurnal Komunikasi Ikatan Sarjana …, 2024
[2] Evaluating commodification and commodifying evaluation
Public Money & Management, 2024
[3] Durchsetzung des Beschäftigtendatenschutzrechts
2024
[4] Embedding digital economy: Fictitious triple movement in the European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act
Social & Legal Studies, 2023
[5] SURVEILLANCE CAPITALISM, THE COMMODIFICATION OF PERSONAL BEHAVIORAL DATA, AND HOW IT FACTORS INTO OUR RESPONSE
2022
[6] DİJİTAL VERİNİN FİNANSALLAŞMASI VE PLATFORM KAPİTALİZMİ
Öneri Dergisi, 2022
[7] Data as a Tradeable Commodity: Propertization vs. the Concept of Exclusive Rights
Bilous - Teisė, 2022
[8] The antecedents for effectiveness of automated enforcement system (AES) in Malaysia
Borneo …, 2022
[9] Digital data: is a new legal regulation needed?
Vilnius University Open Series, 2021
[10] Skaitmeniniai duomenys: ar reikalingas naujas teisinis reguliavimas?
Teisės mokslo pavasaris, 2021
[11] Ethical AI for Automated Bus Lane Enforcement
Sustainability, 2021
[12] Religious Perspectives on Precision Medicine in Singapore
Asian Bioethics …, 2021
[13] Surveillance capitalism: an unstoppable machine?
2021
[14] Acute
2020
[15] IMPLEMENTASI PERATURAN MENTERI KOMINFO NOMOR 20 TAHUN 2016 DI DISDUKCAPIL KABUPATEN SLEMAN, TEMANGGUNG, DAN GIANYAR …
2020
[16] Economic properties of data and the monopolistic tendencies of data economy: policies to limit an Orwellian possibility
2020
[17] Implementation of Regulation of The Minister of Kominfo Number 20 2016 in Disdukcapil Sleman, Temanggung, and Gianyar District
JURNAL PENELITIAN KOMUNIKASI …, 2020
[18] Influence Factors for Customer Acceptance of Data-Driven Contracts in Insurance Ecosystems
2019
[19] The futures of social practices of interaction between humans and Virtual De-ceased Individuals: A Causal Layered Analysis of four ideal types
2019
[20] Artificial Intelligence Assistants and Risk: Framing a Connectivity Risk Narrative
AI & Society, 2019
[21] The Human Element: The Under-Theorized and Underutilized Component Vital to Fostering Blockchain Development
2019
[22] The Value of Privacy: What Does the Personal Data Mean to the Data Subject and Businesses?
Current Issues in Business Law, 2018

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.