Home |  My Orders |  About Rittenhouse |  Browse Categories |  Advanced Search | Search:   GO! 
Book Detail
All prices are approximate and are subject to change.
Undergraduate Titles > Computer Science
The Political Economy of Big Data
Letouz?, Emmanuel
ISBN 13: 
9781786300881
ISBN 10: 
1786300885
Category: 
Computer Science
Edition: 
1
Publisher: 
Wiley
Publication Date: 
12/2024
Format: 
Paperback
Status: 
Not Yet Published
Imprint: 
Wiley-ISTE
Audience: 
Professional and scholarly
Pages: 
120
Weight: 
2
Retail Price: 
100.00 (Tentative Price May Change)
Quantity On Hand: 
0
Quantity On Order: 
0
Email | Print

Synopsis:
Less than a decade after its emergence, it is becoming increasingly clear that the Big Data phenomenon raises questions of profound and complex political economy whose resolution could transform power dynamics globally. 
 
The data-ification of the world is on. They are expressed on social networks, the Internet, via mobile phone or the activation of chips or magnetic tapes, rare are now actions, interactions or human thoughts that do not have a digital translation almost instantaneous. These granular data repositories, connected, structured or not, have logically been described as "the new oil" by some, or the "new uranium" by others. By whom, for what purpose and how the main material of dematerialized economy of the 21st century should be controlled and exploited? With implications for relations and power dynamics at the global level and the future of democracy?
 Less than a decade after its emergence, it is becoming increasingly clear that the Big Data phenomenon raises questions of profound and complex political economy whose resolution could transform power dynamics globally. 
 
The data-ification of the world is on. They are expressed on social networks, the Internet, via mobile phone or the activation of chips or magnetic tapes, rare are now actions, interactions or human thoughts that do not have a digital translation almost instantaneous. These granular data repositories, connected, structured or not, have logically been described as "the new oil" by some, or the "new uranium" by others. By whom, for what purpose and how the main material of dematerialized economy of the 21st century should be controlled and exploited? With implications for relations and power dynamics at the global level and the future of democracy?
 

2010 - 2024 © Rittenhouse Book Distributors, Inc. 511 Feheley Drive, King of Prussia, PA 19406 | P: 800-345-6425 | F: 800-223-7488 |