Conference
Digital Discourses: Privacy in the Age of Data Capitalism
Experts from Southeast Asia and Germany discuss data privacy in the digital realm and concepts of regulation.
Large parts of our lives are captured in the data trails we leave online. Who tracks them and how are they monetized? What is this data worth? Are we drawing the short straw when we trade our data for free in exchange for digital services and the conveniences of the internet? Or are we better off if we embrace a post-privacy world?
The second instalment of the Digital Discourses conference series dives deeply into the complicated relationship between our right to privacy and our desire to browse, communicate, shop, and access services with seamless ease.
To the Conference Website
Michael Seemann (Germany)
Five Unsettling Questions for Digital Capitalism
Katharina Nocun (Germany)
The Data I Called: Data Collections of State and Business
Alia Y. Karunian (Indonesia)
Social Media and Political Ads in Indonesia
Jun-E Tan (Malaysia)
The Impact Of Artificial Intelligence On Human Rights—The Link To Data
Panel Discussion I
The Commercial and Political Value of User Data
Ingo Dachwitz (Germany)
Risks, Rights and Rules – The European Approach to Data Regulation
Sutawan Chanprasert (Thailand)
Protecting Personal Data and Privacy in Southeast Asia: Going Somewhere or Nowhere
Wahyudi Djafar (Indonesia)
Data Regulation Legislation in Indonesia
Tony Seno Hartono (Indonesia)
Data Sovereignty: Does It Matter Where User Data Is Stored?
Panel Discussion II
Data Privacy Concepts and Regulation
All presentations and panel discussions of the conference will be streamed on the Internet. Please refer to the conference website for more information on the streams and the conference programme.
digital discourses
The age of digital transformation breaks apart what we have taken for granted, shifts the balance of power, and brings with it new social, ethical and political questions. The conference series Digital Discourses—initiated by Goethe-Institut Indonesien, the Center for Digital Society (CfDS), ELSAM, and ICT Watch—explores the effects of the transformation on society, politics, the economy and the environment. and the environment..