Omslagafbeelding van de show Digital Governance

Digital Governance

Podcast door Erasmus University Rotterdam

Engels

Technologie en Wetenschap

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Over Digital Governance

This podcast series is dedicated to digital governance. Digital governance is broadly understood as the legal and institutional rules which provide the framework in which digitalization unfolds. The podcasts will be centered around the research done by our DIGOV fellows. We will publish a series of podcasts, which are made using the AI tool Notebook LM. Each podcast will discuss a different article or book chapter, all within the broad framework of digital governance. The podcast series starts with fundamental reflections about responsibility of AI agents. Who is liable when AI is involved in an accident? Can history help us to better understand how AI regulations should be employed? Or, what can moral philosophy tell law? Moreover, a podcast about science communication is presented, which addresses the question of how digital media impacts the communication of scientists.

Alle afleveringen

11 afleveringen

aflevering AI and Children: A Framework for Digital Development and Protection artwork

AI and Children: A Framework for Digital Development and Protection

This whitepaper examines the integration of artificial intelligence into the daily lives of children and adolescents, focusing on its role in education, social media, and leisure activities. The authors highlight how AI can foster educational equity and individualized learning while simultaneously posing risks to the cognitive and emotional development of young users. Key concerns addressed include the vulnerability of minors to manipulation, algorithmic bias, and significant privacy risks associated with data collection. To mitigate these dangers, the text advocates for a multidisciplinary approach involving legal frameworks, age-appropriate design, and the promotion of AI literacy. Ultimately, the document and podcast characterize the responsible shaping of AI as a collective societal duty to protect children’s rights and autonomy in a digital world. For the link of the publication of the article mentioned above, please click here [https://www.plattform-lernende-systeme.de/files/Downloads/Publikationen/ki-und-kinder-2026-pls.pdf].

20 mei 2026 - 21 min
aflevering Between Self-interest and Public Welfare – the Role of Policy Advisors artwork

Between Self-interest and Public Welfare – the Role of Policy Advisors

The article investigates the complex relationship between academic experts and the political sphere, highlighting how scientific policy advice is often hindered by a lack of empirical consensus and a prevailing reproduction crisis in research. Moving beyond the ideal of objective guidance, the authors apply an economic lens to reveal that both politicians and advisors are frequently driven by self-interest, seeking to maximize their own power, prestige, and income rather than serving the public good. The text argues that modern social media has transformed researchers into communication instruments, where a scholar's personal brand is used by officials to legitimize predetermined agendas rather than to foster genuine evidence-based reform. For the link of the publication of the article mentioned above, please click here [https://pure.eur.nl/en/publications/zwischen-eigennutz-und-gemeinwohl-wissenschaftliche-politikberatu/].

10 feb 2026 - 15 min
aflevering Digital vulnerability in the era of AI artwork

Digital vulnerability in the era of AI

The European Union has introduced the AI Act, aimed at establishing a comprehensive framework for regulating AI systems according to the level of risk they pose. This podcast focuses on the ex post dimension of digital vulnerability, identifying four obstacles that hinder individuals from seeking remedies through tort liability: the difficulty in identifying harm, the presence of pure economic loss, the quantification of non-material damage and the issue of federalism. Recognising these four elements provides a basis for reclassifying AI systems based on the nature of harm they may cause. This podcast will be explored through the article ‘Developing a harm-based approach to understand digital vulnerability in the era of AI: a perspective of the European Union’. This article is written by Klaus Heine and Shu Li. For the link of the publication of the article mentioned above, please click here [https://pure.eur.nl/en/publications/developing-a-harm-based-approach-to-understand-digital-vulnerabil/].

10 feb 2026 - 18 min
aflevering What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science. artwork

What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science.

Ignacio Cofone’s book “The Privacy Fallacy” is the starting point for a methodological discussion about how the notion of privacy is approached by law. It is distinguished between law as a practice and law as science. The first is a technique of conflict resolution, while the latter derives empirically testable hypotheses from a theory. In “The Privacy Fallacy” we find both. Epistemological problems arise when the two approaches are not analytically separated. This discussion is guided by the article ‘What do privacy scholars maximize? – Law as a practice and law as a science’, written by prof. Heine. For the link of the publication of the article mentioned above, please click here [https://universitypress.unisob.na.it/ojs/index.php/ejplt/article/view/2093].

22 aug 2025 - 11 min
aflevering Autonomous Decision-Making as a Challenge for Legal Research. artwork

Autonomous Decision-Making as a Challenge for Legal Research.

To get a better understanding of the fundamental problem that economic analysis of law has with autonomous decision-making, different routes for solving the problem are scrutinized. The analysis shows that the toolbox of Law and Economics does not yet provide a clear answer. Doctrinal law can also give no conclusive answers. Instead, this contribution proposes taking a closer look into legal history. The recourse to legal history can neither replace theory, nor can legal rules from the past be transplanted to the present. Yet, a look into legal history can provide fresh ideas on how to deal effectively with the challenges of autonomous decision-making. This podcast is guided by the following paper of prof. Heine: ‘Autonomous Decision-Making as a Challenge for Legal Research’. For the link of the publication of the paper mentioned above, please click here [https://www.mohrsiebeck.com/en/article/autonomous-decision-making-as-a-challenge-for-legal-research-101628jite-2025-0026/].

1 jul 2025 - 21 min
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