Samenvatting
‘A cogent, crisp, and convincing book on the challenges brought by AI and big data applications with respect to crime control and security’ Gary T. Marx, author of Undercover and Windows into the Soul ‘Making Surveillance Public powerfully charts a path forward for examining the digitalisation and algorithmisation of surveillance and its effect on criminology’ Chris Gilliard, writer for Vice, Wired, Real Life Magazine, and The Atlantic
What are the new questions raised by AI for the prevention and detection of crime? How can we rationalise the Amazon Ring doorbell and Tesla’s Sentry Mode? How can algoracism be identified, and what should we think of data donation? Surveillance today cannot be understood without an awareness of how AI and algorithms have become increasingly central in the governance of security. They have led to a substantial expansion in the depth and breadth of surveillance, ranging from mass data collection to mass invasion of privacy. In Making Surveillance Public, Marc Schuilenburg explores the deployment of AI applications, asking who is using them, what their aims are, what outcomes and societal impacts they lead to, and against whom they are used. To this end, he makes a case for a digital criminology centred on sociological questions of power, knowledge and AI experiences. Marc Schuilenburg is a Professor of Digital Surveillance at Erasmus University Rotterdam. Schuilenburg’s other works available in English include Hysteria, The Securitization of Society and Mediapolis.