Date & Time: Thursday, 22February 2024 at 10-11 HRS GMT
Lately much has been discussed on the business value of trust in the app-based, data-driven circular economy. Trust and privacy move hand-in-hand. When individuals trust they are more likely to engage in, interact with, and disclose detailed information about themselves. Yet, of course, this disclosure and in turn, the trust attached, are highly contextually and interpersonally dependent. Recent research has revealed that privacy is a privilege that is afforded by a number of factors tightly linked to social-economic circumstances. Our relationship to not just organizations, but the level of involuntary exposure to data collection – in the environment and through the products and services that we consume are dependent on the privacy levels we can financially afford. Interestingly, from the perspective of data-driven environmental technology such as smart environments (domestic and work-related) these technologies are currently being developed to support wellbeing. This webinar features a dialogue and interview-like analysis (Rousi the interviewer and Vakkuri the interviewee) of two studies we undertook: 1) on smart work places to support worker wellbeing; and 2) anonymised AI-driven video surveillance for elderly care. Through the frames of organizational trust and Vakkuri’s ethical AI development tool, ECCOLA, the discussion will focus on dissecting the scenarios in relation to ethical AI, challenging the role of trust in the privacy economy, and whether or not indeed, the interventional cases presented can ever be fully ethical.