Can the internet be designed to protect democracy and human rights?
Can the internet be designed to protect democracy and human rights?
The internet has given rise to many new opportunities and challenges for the functioning of democracy. This paper suggests that early optimism that the internet would be innately democratic in its effects was replaced over time by the recognition of a wider range of positive and negative effects and potential. It notes that this more mature and pragmatic consensus nevertheless values the internet as a vital support to democracy, and even as a human right. The paper notes that the continual emergence of new technologies, most recently generative artificial intelligence, will generate new opportunities and challenges in the future.
While attention is paid to emerging threats, more support for exploring the emerging benefits of the new technologies to democracy would also deliver positives. The paper’s conclusions identify lessons from the use of deliberation tools in the broader context of the continued interactions between the internet and democracy, suggesting that democratic activity online could benefit from integrating expertise in democratic discourse into design, and by incentivising investment in and reward for deliberative use of online platforms.
democracy, human rights, internet
University of Southampton
Hawes, Ben
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Meylan-Stevenson, Adam
931e6f20-d8e4-4ac2-ae33-00364219ff1b
Ryan, Matt
f07cd3e8-f3d9-4681-9091-84c2df07cd54
2 July 2024
Hawes, Ben
e08d8d27-d342-4bd5-bb8b-79dc8d42d70a
Meylan-Stevenson, Adam
931e6f20-d8e4-4ac2-ae33-00364219ff1b
Ryan, Matt
f07cd3e8-f3d9-4681-9091-84c2df07cd54
Hawes, Ben, Meylan-Stevenson, Adam and Ryan, Matt
(2024)
Can the internet be designed to protect democracy and human rights?
(WSO White Paper, 2024-03, 2024)
University of Southampton
16pp.
(doi:10.5258/SOTON/WSI-WP010).
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
The internet has given rise to many new opportunities and challenges for the functioning of democracy. This paper suggests that early optimism that the internet would be innately democratic in its effects was replaced over time by the recognition of a wider range of positive and negative effects and potential. It notes that this more mature and pragmatic consensus nevertheless values the internet as a vital support to democracy, and even as a human right. The paper notes that the continual emergence of new technologies, most recently generative artificial intelligence, will generate new opportunities and challenges in the future.
While attention is paid to emerging threats, more support for exploring the emerging benefits of the new technologies to democracy would also deliver positives. The paper’s conclusions identify lessons from the use of deliberation tools in the broader context of the continued interactions between the internet and democracy, suggesting that democratic activity online could benefit from integrating expertise in democratic discourse into design, and by incentivising investment in and reward for deliberative use of online platforms.
Text
2024-03, WSI White Paper - The Internet and Democracy
- Version of Record
More information
Published date: 2 July 2024
Keywords:
democracy, human rights, internet
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 491719
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491719
PURE UUID: dd7c7ad3-d91b-4374-98c5-75723665feb6
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2024 16:38
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:47
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Author:
Ben Hawes
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