Research on law and technology, whether mono-, multi-, or interdisciplinary, is fragmented, sometimes paywalled (the case of legal databases), and generally difficult to aggregate. This section sets out RSS feeds for all the members of the Network, and can be checked online by anyone who wants to check a more thematic library on this. Since very few publication outlets actually make their information flows interoperable with other platforms (such as this website), we will be keeping a curated section (selected by the editors of the website or submitted by you), under the broader category of Publications.
SSRN feeds
- Decentralized Autonomous Organization
- Trust in blockchain-based systems
- Blockchain governance
- Cryptoeconomics
- Blockchain-based technologies
- Mining
- Self-sovereign identity
- Smart contracts
- Digital scarcity
- Reputation
- Civil legal personality of artificial intelligence. Future or utopia?
- Political advertising exposed: tracking Facebook ads in the 2021 Dutch elections
- Regulation of news recommenders in the Digital Services Act: empowering David against the Very Large Online Goliath
- Towards a ban of discriminatory rankings by digital gatekeepers? Reflections on the proposal for a Digital Markets Act
- REVISION: Researching with Data Rights
- Algorithmic bias and the Value Sensitive Design approach
- Cybersecurity
- Digital sovereignty
- Smart technologies
- Digital commons
- Trusted commons: why ‘old’ social media matter
- Reddit quarantined: can changing platform affordances reduce hateful material online?
- Combating misinformation online: re-imagining social media for policy-making
- VPNs as boundary objects of the internet: (mis)trust in the translation(s)
- Borderline speech: caught in a free speech limbo?
- There’s a place for us? The Digital Agenda Committee and internet policy in the German Bundestag
- Cryptoparties: empowerment in internet security?
- REVISION: MHealth for Alzheimer's Disease: Regulation, Consent, and Privacy Concerns
- Internationalising state power through the internet: Google, Huawei and geopolitical struggle
- The legal geographies of extradition and sovereign power