The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China

Studies of digital resignation focus on the idea of the corporate cultivation of digital resignation among users, an area of intense importance when examining user data sharing with corporations. To best appreciate the implications of digital resignation in a transnational context, it is important t...

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Main Author: Aynne Kokas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2024-12-01
Series:Big Data & Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517241289441
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author Aynne Kokas
author_facet Aynne Kokas
author_sort Aynne Kokas
collection DOAJ
description Studies of digital resignation focus on the idea of the corporate cultivation of digital resignation among users, an area of intense importance when examining user data sharing with corporations. To best appreciate the implications of digital resignation in a transnational context, it is important to consider not just resignation by users, but by policymakers. Weak digital policymaking in the US context enables continued digital resignation by users. It also allows for data trafficking, or government directed movement of user data across borders without clear user consent. This paper compares digital policymaking using three cases of national, regional, and sector-based digital policymaking. The commentary argues that while US policymakers often cast concerns on Chinese influence in the US, such arguments obscure the systematic resignation of US policymakers to a weak and ineffectual domestic digital oversight system. Examining digital resignation through a national government lens enables a more complete view of the transnational implications of this important concept.
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spelling doaj-art-704ee7c20e354136a858d7e64b267eeb2025-08-20T02:51:15ZengSAGE PublishingBig Data & Society2053-95172024-12-011110.1177/20539517241289441The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to ChinaAynne Kokas0 Professor, Media Studies, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USAStudies of digital resignation focus on the idea of the corporate cultivation of digital resignation among users, an area of intense importance when examining user data sharing with corporations. To best appreciate the implications of digital resignation in a transnational context, it is important to consider not just resignation by users, but by policymakers. Weak digital policymaking in the US context enables continued digital resignation by users. It also allows for data trafficking, or government directed movement of user data across borders without clear user consent. This paper compares digital policymaking using three cases of national, regional, and sector-based digital policymaking. The commentary argues that while US policymakers often cast concerns on Chinese influence in the US, such arguments obscure the systematic resignation of US policymakers to a weak and ineffectual domestic digital oversight system. Examining digital resignation through a national government lens enables a more complete view of the transnational implications of this important concept.https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517241289441
spellingShingle Aynne Kokas
The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
Big Data & Society
title The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
title_full The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
title_fullStr The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
title_full_unstemmed The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
title_short The corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking: How weak US regulations enable data trafficking to China
title_sort corporate cultivation of digital resignation in policymaking how weak us regulations enable data trafficking to china
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517241289441
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