Subject: | [AISWorld] Electronic Markets - CfP Special Issue on "Personal Data Markets" |
---|---|
Date: | Tue, 16 Oct 2012 19:08:18 +0200 |
From: | Karen Heyden <heyden@wifa.uni-leipzig.de> |
CC: | <aisworld@lists.aisnet.org> |
- Apologies for cross-postings -
Dear colleagues,
We would like to draw your attention to our
call for papers for Electronic Markets' special issue on
"Personal Data Markets"
The submission deadline is March 8, 2013. The
detailed CfP is copied below.
We cordially invite original research
contributions to the special issue or to general research on
electronic markets and networked business from all potential
authors. Please note that general research articles can be
submitted anytime whereas special issue articles have to be
submitted by the deadline shown in the CfP.
Please feel free to forward this e-mail to
interested colleagues.
If questions arise regarding the submission
deadline or potential topics please contact the editorial
office (editors@electronicmarkets.org).
With best regards,
Karen Heyden
Executive Editor
********************************************************************
Electronic Markets - The International Journal
on Networked Business
Call for Papers for Special Issue on
"Personal Data Markets"
********************************************************************
Guest Editors:
***************
* Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University,
USA
*
Rainer Boehme, Westfaelische Wilhelms-Universität Muenster,
Germany
* Kai-Lung Hui, Hong Kong University of Science
and Technology, Hong Kong
* Sarah Spiekermann, Vienna University of
Economics and Business, Austria
Theme:
******
"Personal data is the new oil of the Internet
and the new currency of the digital world." With these
words, Meglena Kuneva, Europe's Consumer Commissioner,
described an economic development increasingly manifest on a
global scale. Personal data is a new asset class. Every day,
individuals around the world send about 47 billion
(non-spam) e-mails, submit 95 million tweets on Twitter, and
share 30 billion pieces of content on Facebook (World
Economic Forum 2011). Much of this user-created information
does not go unused by third parties: firms collect and use
personal information to enhance consumer experience as well
as for their own profit. Search engines such as Google and
Bing, or social networks such as Facebook, grow equity
mainly by using individuals' information to personalize
advertisements. Data aggregators such as Acxiom, Rapleaf,
Acurint, Choicepoint, or Spokeo sell access to personal and
household information. Not only is personal data used for
advertising - it can also help companies to understand
insurance risks, credit worthiness, employability, and so
forth. And technological innovation seems to create ever-new
opportunities to tap the data resource, accompanied by novel
business models trying to exploit and monetize its wealth.
Economists have for long debated the economic
implications of abundant consumer information and the
trade-offs between privacy and disclosure. Designing markets
where personal data is openly traded between data subjects
and data holders, and assigning individuals ownership rights
over their data, emerged in the last two decades as
solutions to the privacy debate alternative to both pure
regulation and pure self-regulation. Over these years, the
debate over the technical, legal, economics, and behavioral
feasibility, efficiency, and ethicality of such markets for
personal data (or related concepts such as personal
information warehouses, personal data vaults, and
propertization of personal data), has continued - with
dedicated firms providing related services emerging in the
past few years. Many aspects of this debate remain
unsolved: How do we properly price personal data? Can
individuals whose data is traded and used become active
participants in this market and demand fair price for their
data? What technologies can help them to manage their
personal data and enable them to actively participate in
trading this asset class if they want to, while protecting
their privacy if they need to? Would they actually want to
at all? This special issue seeks to contribute to the
theoretical understanding and empirical investigation of
personal data markets from an interdisciplinary perspective.
We particularly welcome research that discusses ways to
resolve potential clashes inherent in these markets, in
particular when it comes to the maintenance of people's
privacy. Submissions may treat personal data markets from a
general perspective or they may relate to specific
industries, such as the retail, health, insurance or banking
industry.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited
to):
****************************************************
Markets for personal data
* Valuation of personal data
* Mechanisms for personal data markets
* Market structure and organization (including
competition, multi-sided markets, secondary markets)
* Hidden action, hidden information, and
(negative) inference in personal data markets
* Evolution of personal data markets
* Business models involving personal data
markets
* Contracts and derivatives on personal data
markets
* Barriers and market frictions
* Decision and game theory for personal data
markets
* Market stability, safety, and security
mechanism
* Modeling principles, analytical tools, and
measurement methodology
* Sector-specific studies (e.g., credit or
labor markets)
Drivers and impediments of personal data
markets
* Compatibility with data protection and
privacy laws (in various jurisdictions)
* Property rights management and other legal
approaches to personal data markets
* Privacy-enhancing technologies relating to
personal data markets
* Contract enforcement mechanisms
* Protocols supporting personal data markets
* Formal tools (e.g., data handling policy
languages)
* Privacy metrics for personal data markets
* Trust in market makers and market
participants
* Behavioral studies of trade-offs in personal
data disclosure
* Policy analysis and market regulation
* International harmonization of personal data
markets
* Macroscopic consequences: productivity,
growth, equality, and freedom
Additional topic suggestions are welcome. All
papers will be peer reviewed and should conform to
Electronic Markets publication standards. Electronic Markets
is a SSCI-listed journal and supports methodological and
theoretical pluralism, i.e. empirical or theoretical work,
qualitative research, design science and/or prototypes are
all welcomed by the journal. If you would like to discuss
any aspect of the special issue, please contact either of
the editors listed below.
Contact addresses
*****************
or editors@electronicmarkets.org
Submission
**********
All papers must be original, not published or
under review elsewhere. Papers must be submitted via our
electronic submission system at http://elma.edmgr.com.
Instructions, templates and general information
are available at http://www.electronicmarkets.org/authors.
Please note the preferred article length must
be in a range of 3,500 to 6,500 words.
Important Deadline
******************
Submission deadline: March 8, 2013
The CfP is also available on our website at http://www.electronicmarkets.org/call-for-paper/single-view-for-cfp/?tx_ttnews[tt_news]=12&cHash=2e2071a9fd2cd6798bc9adb06ae6c3d3.
====================================================================
Electronic Markets - The International Journal
on Networked Business
====================================================================
Editors-in-Chief: Rainer Alt, University of
Leipzig and Hubert Oesterle, University of St. Gallen
Executive Editor: Karen Heyden, University of
Leipzig
Editorial Office:
Electronic Markets - The International Journal
on Networked Business
c/o Information Systems Institute University of
Leipzig
04109 Leipzig, Germany
Phone +49 341 9733600
Fax +49 341 9733612
E-mail: editors@electronicmarkets.org
electronicmarkets.org
facebook.com/ElectronicMarkets
twitter.com/journal_EM
Electronic Markets is a SSCI-listed academic
journal and published quarterly by Springer. ISSN:
1019-6781 (Paper) 1422-8890 (Online).