English

A Noxious Market for Personal Data

Other Computer Science 2020-01-03 v1

Abstract

Many policymakers, academics and governments have advocated for exchangeable property rights over information as it presents a market solution to what could be considered a market failure. Particularly in jurisdictions such as Africa, Asia or South America, where weaker legal protections and fleeting regulatory enforcement leaves data subjects vulnerable or exploited regardless of the outcome. We argue that whether we could achieve this personal data economy in which individuals have ownership rights akin to property rights over their data should be approached with caution as a solution to ensuring individuals have agency over their data across different legal landscapes. We present an objection to the use of property rights, a market solution, due to the \textit{noxious} nature of personal data - which is founded on Satz and Sandel's objection to markets.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2001.00457,
  title  = {A Noxious Market for Personal Data},
  author = {Abdul Abdulrahim and Michael Famoroti},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2001.00457},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Presented at NeurIPS 2019 Workshop on Machine Learning for the Developing World

R2 v1 2026-06-23T13:01:25.390Z