The Collaborative Economy
Ever since its appearance, Internet has allowed us to collaborate with other people remotely. In the 80's, email was the breakthrough that enabled exchange of digital materials. In the 90's, the World Wide Web opened collaboration on web sites. After 2000, social media and e-meeting technologies enabled face-to-face interaction with others via the Internet. New modes of collaboration, such as crowd sourcing, crowd funding, co-creation or open design are reaching mainstream use. Advances in technologies related to Collaborative Internet, Big/Open Data, Crypto Currency and Additive Manufacturing are bringing the Collaborative Economy ever closer to us. This study reveals a wide range of opportunities and threats associated with these technologies,as well as social, political, economic, moral and ethical issues related to this new way of working. Policy options are presented, in order to help policy makers anticipate developments with effective policies that will nurture the positive impacts of collaborative Internet and avoid the negative ones.
Studie
Anlage
Multimedia
Externe Autor
External authors: Steve Robertshaw (editor), Nick Achilleopoulos, Johan E. Bengtsson, Patrick Crehan, Angele Giuliano, John Soldatos (AcrossLimits Ltd, Malta)
Über dieses Dokument
Art der Veröffentlichung
Verfasser
Politikbereich
Schlagwortliste
- Auswirkungen der Informationstechnologie
- BILDUNG UND KOMMUNIKATION
- computergestützter Entwurf
- Datenschutz
- Elektronischer Handel
- elektronisches Geld
- FINANZWESEN
- Forschung und geistiges Eigentum
- Geldwirtschaft
- HANDEL
- Informatik
- Information und Informationsverarbeitung
- Informationsverarbeitung
- Internet
- Kommunikation
- PRODUKTION, TECHNOLOGIE UND FORSCHUNG
- soziale Auswirkungen
- SOZIALE FRAGEN
- Sozialer Rahmen
- Technologie und technische Regelungen
- technologische Zukunftsforschung
- technologischer Wandel
- Urheberrecht
- Verbrauch
- Verbraucherschutz
- Vermarktung
- WIRTSCHAFT
- wirtschaftliche Auswirkung
- Wirtschaftsanalyse