Abstract
Various smartphone apps and services are available which encourage users to report where and when they feel they are in an unsafe or threatening environment. This user generated content may be used to build datasets, which can show areas that are considered ‘bad,’ and to map out ‘safe’ routes through such neighbourhoods. Despite certain advantages, this data inherently carries the danger that streets or neighbourhoods become stigmatized and already existing prejudices might be reinforced. Such stigmas might also result in negative consequences for property values and businesses, causing irreversible damage to certain parts of a municipality. Overcoming such an “evidence-based stigma” — even if based on biased, unreviewed, outdated, or inaccurate data — becomes nearly impossible and raises the question how such data should be managed.
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CITATION STYLE
Gstrein, O. J., & Ritsema van Eck, G. J. (2018). Mobile Devices as Stigmatizing Security Sensors: The GDPR and a Future of Crowdsourced “Broken Windows” by Oskar Josef Gstrein, Gerard Jan Ritsema van Eck :: SSRN. International Data Privacy Law, 8(1), 69–85. Retrieved from https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3105228
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