Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Data protection law beyond identifiability? Atmospheric profiles, nudging and the Stratumseind Living Lab
ID_Doc 40058
Authors Galic, M; Gellert, R
Title Data protection law beyond identifiability? Atmospheric profiles, nudging and the Stratumseind Living Lab
Year 2021
Published
Abstract The deployment of pervasive information and communication technologies (ICTs) within smart city initiatives transforms cities into extraordinary apparatuses of data capture. ICTs such as smart cameras, sound sensors and lighting technology are trying to infer and affect persons? interests, preferences, emotional states, and behaviour. It should be no surprise then that contemporary legal and policy debates on privacy in smart cities are dominated by a debate focused on data and, therefore, on data protection law. In other words, data protection law is the go-to legal framework to regulate data processing activities within smart cities and similar initiatives. While this may seem obvious, a number of important hurdles might prevent data protection law to be (successfully) applied to such initiatives. In this contribution, we examine one such hurdle: whether the data processed in the context of smart cities actually qualifies as personal data, thus falling within the scope of data protection law. This question is explored not only through a theoretical discussion but also by taking an illustrative example of a smart city-type initiative - the Stratumseind 2.0 project and its living lab in the Netherlands (the Stratumseind Living Lab; SLL). Our analysis shows that the requirement of 'identifiability' might be difficult to satisfy in the SLL and similar initiatives. This is so for two main reasons. First, a large amount of the data at stake do not qualify as personal data, at least at first blush. Most of it relates to the environment, such as, data about the weather, air quality, sound and crowding levels, rather than to identified or even likely identifiable individuals. This is connected to the second reason, according to which, the aim of many smart city initiatives (including the SLL) is not to identify and target specific individuals but to manage or nudge them as a multiplicity - a combination of the environment, persons and all of their interactions. This is done by trying to affect the 'atmosphere' on the street. We thus argue that a novel type of profiling operations is at stake; rather than relying on individual or group profiling, the SLL and similar initiatives rely upon what we have called 'atmospheric profiling'. We conclude that it remains highly uncertain, whether smart city initiatives like the SLL actually process personal data. Yet, they still pose risks for a wide variety of rights and freedoms, which data protection law is meant to protect, and a need for regulation remains. (c) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ )
PDF https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clsr.2020.105486

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
37173 Khurshudov, A The smart city conundrum: technology, privacy, and the quest for convenience(2024)
45259 Peterson, M; Fröding, B Privacy in a Smart City(2024)Etikk I Praksis, 18, 1
39958 Fabregue, BFG; Bogoni, A Privacy and Security Concerns in the Smart City(2023)Smart Cities, 6, 1
40482 Gstrein, OJ Data autonomy: beyond personal data abuse, sphere transgression, and datafied gentrification in smart cities(2024)Ethics And Information Technology, 26, 3
37958 Martínez-Ballesté, A; Pérez-Martínez, PA; Solanas, A The Pursuit of Citizens' Privacy: A Privacy-Aware Smart City Is Possible(2013)Ieee Communications Magazine, 51, 6
41656 van Zoonen, L Privacy concerns in smart cities(2016)Government Information Quarterly, 33, 3
45642 Gabrys, J Programming environments: environmentality and citizen sensing in the smart city(2014)Environment And Planning D-Society & Space, 32, 1
43416 Shaffer, G Applying A Contextual Integrity Framework To Privacy Policies For Smart Technologies(2021)
38700 Faisal, K Applying the Purpose Limitation Principle in Smart-City Data-Processing Practices: A European Data Protection Law Perspective(2023)Communication Law And Policy, 28, 1
38444 Beckwith, R; Sherry, J; Prendergast, D Data Flow in the Smart City: Open Data Versus the Commons(2019)
Scroll