Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power
What is a more ambitious vision for data use and regulation that can deliver a positive shift in the digital ecosystem towards people and society?
The Ada Lovelace Institute recognises an urgent need for a comprehensive and transformative vision for data that can serve as a ‘North Star’: directing our collective efforts and encouraging us to think bigger and move further away from the current digital landscape, which is characterised by:
- Exploitative data practices that fail to capture the potential social value of data, and fail to protect individual rights and serve communities.
- Short-sighted political and institutional visions for the role of data.
- A lack of agency over how data is generated and used, with stark power imbalances between people, corporations and states.1
Our report, Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power, proposes four cross-cutting interventions across infrastructure, governance, institutions and public participation that can enable a richer set of possibilities for the digital ecosystem, re-centre people and society and contest the increasingly entrenched systems of digital power.
Project background
Our work started out by asking: What is a more ambitious vision for data use and regulation that can deliver a positive shift in the digital ecosystem towards people and society?
This drove the establishment of an expert working group, bringing together leading thinkers in privacy and data protection, public policy, law and economics from the technology sector, policy, academia and civil society across the UK, Europe, USA, Canada and Hong Kong.
This disciplinarily diverse group brought their perspectives and expertise to understand the current data ecosystem and make sense of the complexity that characterises data governance in the UK, across Europe and internationally. Their reflection on the challenges informed a holistic approach to the changes needed.
Using discussions, debates, commissioned pieces, futures-thinking workshops, speculative scenario building and horizon scanning, the group identified the most promising propositions for transformative change fit for the middle of the century.
Through discussion of each intervention, the report brings an initial set of provocative ideas and concepts, to inspire a thoughtful debate about the transformative change. These proposals can help us think about potential ways forward, open up questions for debate instead of rushing to provide answers, and offer a starting point from which more fully fledged solutions for change are able to grow.
We’re now calling on policymakers, researchers, civil society organisations, funders and ethical industry innovators to engage with and iterate on these proposals, as a part of a collective effort towards lasting change.
Rethinking data working group
The Rethinking data working group, co-chaired by Professor Diane Coyle (Bennett Institute of Public Policy, University of Cambridge) and Paul Nemitz (Principal Adviser on Justice Policy, European Commission, and visiting Professor of Law, College of Europe) helped guide the Ada Lovelace Institute’s thinking on the future of data regulation.
Project publications
Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power
What is a more ambitious vision for data use and regulation that can deliver a positive shift in the digital ecosystem towards people and society?
Rethinking data blog series
Beyond the regulation of big platforms – supporting different visions for digital ecosystems
An introduction to the Rethinking data programme
From ‘walled gardens’ to open meadows
How interoperability could be the key to addressing platform power
Making interoperability work in practice: forms, business models and safeguards
Equitable interoperability as a standard
Related content
Rethinking data and rebalancing power: building a digital ecosystem that works for people and society
This virtual event aims to catalyse discussion by convening organisations to share their reflections on building a more positive future for data.
Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power
What is a more ambitious vision for data use and regulation that can deliver a positive shift in the digital ecosystem towards people and society?
Rethinking data working group
The Rethinking data working group was established to guide the Ada Lovelace Institute’s thinking on the future of data governance and regulation
Changing the data governance ecosystem – through narratives, practices and regulations
Today the Ada Lovelace Institute launches Rethinking Data.