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Digital rights are perhaps more prominent than ever before. But are these rights accessible, effective, and sufficient? The continued development of new technologies including large language models may exacerbate and introduce new threats to digital rights. The unprecedented scale of data collected to train algorithms can create transparency deficits that can limit the monitoring and enforcement of digital rights, while the use of predictive analytics to generate verisimilar personal data can result in digital redlining.
This special collection aims to expand our understanding of digital rights, including but not limited to data protection rights such as the right to access or erasure, information rights such as freedom of information, or rights conceived of as human/machine rights.