Tag Archive for: Singapore

tropical garden in singapore

CPT – Users in focus: Weighing behaviour and attitudes in media governance and platform policies

I know how it works: Exploring the impact of algorithmic media content awareness on the privacy calculus of self-disclosure
» Dr. Zhang Hao Goh (Singapore)1, Prof. Gerard Goggin (Australia)2, Dr. Kym Campbell (Singapore)1 (1. Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, 2. Western Sydney University)

  • More data = more insights within mobile AI applications
  • Layman vs. Expert – what does a model of knowing look like?
  • Hierarchical structure of Awareness: Experiential (knowledge and experieince); systematic (how algorithms work); Normative (values and norms/ethics)

Are All AI Applications Created Equal? Unpacking Public Attitudes Toward AI Policies in Taiwan
» Dr. Tsung-Jen Shih (Taiwan)1, Ms. WEI-SHAN ZHENG (Taiwan)2 (1. College of Communication, National Chengchi University, Taiwan, R.O.C., 2. Telecom Technology Center (TTC), Taiwan, R.O.C.)

  • General public in Taiwan and how they understand AI policies
  • Deference and scientific authority (Lee & Scheufele, 2006) – we trust scientist more and we believe, if we do not believe we question legitimacy of science
  • Findings indicate that both deference and moral considerations benefit perceptions

Behaviorism Takes Command: A Study on A/B Testing and Experimental Culture in Big Internet Tech Companies
» Ms. Xia Yunxuan (China)1 (1. Peking University School of New Media)

  • Engineers vs. designers through A/B testing (testing as a decision making process)
  • How has A/B testing evolved from a testign tool to a mechanism of digital governacne?
  • A/B testing as a form of experimental culture – this emerges from within the tech industry as a constant process that is underway
  • The backbone of design inhibits how the experimentation of the testing process – expanding the gaps between techn workers and users

Characteristics and Regulations of Digital Identity Theft in the AI Era: A Grounded Theory Study of Rednote Micro-Influencers
» Ms. Yichuan Wang (China)1, Mr. Hanze Zhao (China)2 (1. School of Journalism and Communication, Tsinghua University, 2. Beijing Foreign Studies University)

  • It makes me think of this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOuGH9Gpeos
  • Method (coding): Open coding, axial coding then

Day 4

CPT – Generative AI Governance: Institutions, Imaginaries, Innovations

Innovation vs Imagination in GenAI: A Comparative Patent Analysis of China, Europe, and the United States
» Dr. Yuner ZHU (Hong Kong)1, Dr. Xinzhi Zhang (Hong Kong)2, Prof. Bu Zhong (Hong Kong)1 (1. Hong Kong Baptist University, 2. City University of Hong Kong)

  • Systematic review of AI policy in Europe (Value Oriented), US (Market-driven) and China (State-led)
  • Examining the relationship between Innovation and Imagination
  • Patent filings: THomson Reuters Derwent World Patents Index
  • Patent claims – 6.7% China, 86% Europe, 34.8% US – really clever way to identify where the innovation is and where the rest follow (I suspect it is highest in China with much interest emerging from Europe)
  • Q: Expand on the clash between the three policy spaces?

Strikes and unrest in Hollywood media industry: bringing workers into the debate over GAI regulation and governance
» Mr. ANDRE ROCHA (Brazil)1 (1. DigiLabour research lab)

  • digitallabour.com.br (double check this link) Brazillian colleagues doing work on the WGA
  • Hollywood strikes
  • Power resources mobilization: Institutional “Hollywood is ‘union town'”; Economic (structural): disruption of media markets; Societal (discursive): public opinion that AI is not art/threat to workers/reflects dominant views
  • This moment spilled over into the gaming industry and other labour movements

Preemptive Dispositif: Data Annotation, Security, and the Territorialisation of Generative AI in China
» Dr. PENGFEI FU (China)1, Dr. Jian Lin (Hong Kong)2 (1. Shanghai Jiao Tong Univeristy, 2. Chinese University of Hong Kong)

  • China internet governance has existed in a ‘post-moderation’ mode since its inception
  • Concerns have moved from not what is made but how AI systems are designed, trained, developed, etc.
  • ‘upstream interventions’ – data annotation such as screening, cleaning, classifying, rating, marking and quality verification that can be used to train LLMs. Not just technical but also normative and social.
  • This is done as a ‘national workforce’. Ummmmm….
  • This sits within a global workforce labour model towards data annotation
  • Shift towards a pre-production regulation (this thinking aligns with our sandboxing approach), with focus on how training is done
  • Q: yes! But how to do this practically?

Assembling Generative Artificial Intelligence: Mapping Policy Evolution and Governance
» Dr. Chao Su (United States)1 (1. Boston University)

  • Wayback machine to snapshot TikTok’s Community Guidelines from 2018
  • Published article here: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369118X.2025.2513672

CPT – What drives digital adoption and regulation? Between moral panics and digital identity

Do Sleeping Sovereigns Dream of Digital Identities?: Identity, Sovereignty, Citizenship
» Mr. James Rosenberg (United States)1 (1. University of Wisconsin–Madison)

  • The introduction of the EU digital wallet
  • Self Sovereign Identity: the internet identity layer as a solution to public trust across the internet – a menas of proving identity on the internt
  • TCP/IP provides an address not an identity
  • 3 solutions: centralised model (id cards etc.); federated model (insert identity provider i.e. Google credentials); decentralized model (SSI – relationship between you and IP provider)
  • Self-Sovereign Identity: Decentralized digital identity and verifiable credentials
  • The sovereign individual – anyone can be rich, citizenship is dead, nation-state is dead, live elsewhere from your money in a tax haven

The Anxiety of Age: Moral Media Panics over Children’s Social Media Use as a Tool to Regulate
» Dr. Catherine Page Jeffery (Australia)1, Dr. Justine Humphry (Australia)2, Prof. Jonathon Hutchinson (Australia)1 (1. University of Sydney, 2. The University of Sydney)

  • This is our work, questiosn as follows: Is this private and public media? What is the reach of those orgs that are presented in the data? I don’t know if reach is the thing to measure here, I think it’s impact. Haidt > Wippa > 36 months etc. then the link with policy agenda.
  • What about individual ‘media’, as opposed to ‘the media’
  • Presented excellently by Cat and Justine

One World, Different Priorities: AI Technology Policies and the Global South
» Prof. chika Anyanwu (Australia)1 (1. University of New South Wales)

  • AI policies and tis translation around the world, especially the Global South
  • GenAI in Africe, a colonial lens,
  • “Technology transfer”: colonial term that the West will allow knowledge to come into Africa
  • Socially constructed technology spaces (GenAI) and how this transfers across the glove(the question of power and influence)
  • Superiority lens (McDonalds food is cheaper than good food as an example), Interesting read on this topic here
  • Homi K. Bhabha’s Third Space Theory and Cultural Identity Today: A Critical Review
  • Noble and algorithms of oppression
  • Fascinating analysis of Africa from early ‘cheap labour’, then to material wealth
  • What about now (space for GenAI)?
  • Africa AI Policy Framework
  • Congo as a stronghold of minerals for tech, becoming ‘the bride of the US’ as a result of the tensions between US and China

Understanding Digital Cryptocurrency Communities: Digital Participation, Infrastructure, and Social Networks in the Global South
» Dr. Jonalou Labor (Denmark)1 (1. Aarhus University)

  • This is important work to bridge the scholarship between crypto worlds (bitcoin etc.) and platform studies
  • Multi-layers as a way to understand crypto (create their own platform layers), embedding this work in platform studies – think: Discord as a way to communicate about Bitcoin
  • Digital Bayanihan is the connection between collective action and cryptocurrencies – adaption of new frameworks in digital activism
  • Great work that provides clear evidence for the inclusion of alternative regioanl models (i.e Philippines) in platform studies.

Media’ s Embrace of Technology: How Media Portrays the Use of Autonomous Taxis and Its Impact on Individuals’ Adoption Intentions
» Prof. Christine Yi-Hui HUANG (Hong Kong)1, Ms. Ruoheng LIU (China)
1, Ms. Shuang GAO (China)1, Ms. Bo CHANG (China)1 (1. City University
of Hong Kong)

CPT – The Digital Transactions Turn: Making Policy and Governance Fit-For-Purpose

Digital Transaction Platforms in Asia
» Prof. Adrian Athique (Australia)1 (1. The University of Queensland)

  • Digital transactions are acts of: code, exchange, communication, solidarity and power
  • Xanadu Project was already doing this
  • Cascading transactions – automated and layered nature of platforms to think beyond economies
  • Strategic design
  • Transaction platforms: payment, banking, exchange, escrow, social media, social credit
  • Currencies: Airtime, social, crypto, legible reserves

TikTok Refugees and the Cross-Cultural Public Sphere: Social Transactions and International Communication Policy
» Prof. Haiqing Yu (Australia)1 (1. RMIT University)

  • TikTok refugees went to Insta reels, YouTube shorts but India won: Chingari, Roposo, Moj, Josh. Plus Rednote in China
  • Red note users: “What?!? Why do I now see all these blue eyes?”
  • Total cultural explosion between US and Chinese users – Cross cultural social translations
  • Exchange of English, Chinese, Chinglish is more informative than then a Chinese State or New York Times explanation
  • Impacts on policy – book idea: “policy intermediaries”

Platform Labor and Transaction Chains
» Prof. Cheryll Ruth Soriano (Philippines)1 (1. De La Salle University Manila)

  • Next Wave Cities – support for Philippines labour industries – digital jobs and labour
  • Upwork is the platform that results – think: Airtasker but better
  • This platform and service prompts a new kind of transaction platform – GCash
  • [This includes Vietnam]
  • The oversupply of labour has created new industries on how to be successful on UpWork
  • It’s very similar to the YouTube world – creators, MCNs, training, ‘universities/feeder schools’

E-commerce logistics in Southeast Asia: the cases of Shopee and Lazada
» Dr. Emma Baulch (Malaysia)1 (1. Monash University Malaysia)

  • Lots of talk of ‘intermediaries’ here – I think there is a thread that unexplored in all the work in this panel
  • Fascinating work that explores the tensions of delivery drivers especially in Malaysia
view of illuminated buildings at night

CPT – Governing content and user behaviour on platforms: regulation, policy and practices

“Weapons of the Weak”: Daily Resistance and Collusion of Platform Content Moderators
» Prof. Enqiang Guo (China)1, Dr. Jiebing Liang (China)2 (1. East China University of Political Science and Law, 2. School of Media and Communication, Shanghai Jiao Tong University)

  • Content moderators utilising the form of adaption in the application of moderation
  • Data from Bilibili, Dounyin, Weibo, also used digital ethnography of moderators, users and creators
  • Timing is important, compliance risks due to overwhelming or working overtime
  • China is positioned between complex workgin conditions and platform content moderation. The moderators develop strategic and flexible practices to address stringent assmenet metrics imposed by platforms
  • Q: how does this compare with Western moderation practices?

Connecting Policies and Algorithms: A New Governance Framework for Cyberbullying
» Prof. Wei Li (China)1, Ms. Qingxuan Cheng (China)1, Prof. Hao Xu (China)1 (1. School of New Media, Peking University)

  • Cyberbullying: abusive, insulting, slanderous, invasive information (what does the literature say/could this be extended further?)
  • AI engaging in cyberbullying: “ChatGPT/4Chan is the worst model on the internet”
  • What are the new trends? What are the governing frameworks? develop new governance models;
  • New trends: rise of intelligent user networks. intellignet nodes become the centre of the network becoming the most significant ‘users’ in the network (how do we know this?)
  • Existing governance frameworks: Policy docs from Meta, WeChat, TikTok, YouTube, WhatsApp. Categories include Supportive Tools, Coercive Measures with minimal guidance, Weak connection to law enforcement in accountability
  • Dilemmas: High cost, Imbalance between control and guidance, Difficulty in pursuing and obtaining evidence
  • New dilemmas: AI can ‘crack the keyword audit system’ quickly
  • Integrating LoveGPT (?) (chat with victims), GPT-4Chan (speed of fake content)
  • By allowing bad content, this can help to train models (wow, contentious)
  • Looking for collaborators
  • Q: What about civic dissent/deviant practices (legitimate)?

Negotiating state-led governance policies: how self-regulation operates on Weibo
» Mr. Wenhao Zhou (China)1 (1. School of Journalism and Communication, Wuhan University)

  • Instructuralization on platfomrs – Weibo has 587m users, state-led regulatory model
  • RQ: How has China state-led platfrom governance policies evolved? RQ2: How can Weibo interact with state-led policies of regulation
  • “Negotiative Governance”
  • Platform governance, policy debates in platform governance, platform self regulation – the integration of these approaches is the background for negotiative governance
  • Doc analysis (regulatory papers), case study of Weibo, Platform biography
  • Evolution of regulation in China – content governance (health), market governance (fair), data governance (user rights)
  • The role of intermediary – can you unpack this further? Is this the role of Weibo?
  • The user participation and global collaboration (ordinary users and global platforms) Digital sovereignty (Shi & Yu, 2023)

Communicating the Climate Crisis: Translating Science into Policy and Practice

Audrey Tan (Assistant News Editor (Environment), The Straits Times, Singapore Press Holdings Kong)

  • Straits Times – National newspaper covering national events, has a Singapore focus,
  • Keen interest in environmental reporting, weather reports have lots of engagement, people can see the relevance
  • Raising awareness, serving as a bridge, galvanising action, spotlight on SEA

Man Jing (Co-founder, Science and Environment, Channel “Just Keep Thinking”)

Adam Douglas Switzer (Director, CIFAL @ NTU, Asian School of the Environment, Professor, Asian School of the Environment, Assistant Dean (Development), College of Science, Director of CIFAL@NTU, Asian School of the Environment, Nanyang Technological University)

  • $57Million funded project that brings science and humanities together – science project that brings communicaiton in at the foundation level
  • “Climate Change and Misinformation in the Media”
  • How do we do communication when the science is real and effects are visible
  • Leaders and their misinformation (i.e. Trump and Abbott)

Janil Puthucheary (Senior Minister of State, Ministry of Digital Development and Information, Singapore)

  • How does the lessons from Singapore inform the world and vice-versa?

CPT – Digital geopolitics, sovereignty and technological interdependence

The European Third Way: the EU’s strategic narrative of a valuebased digital order and its global impact
» Dr. Julia Pohle (Germany)1, Mr. Leo Thüer (Germany)1, Mr. Milan Schröder (Germany)1, Prof. Christian Rauh (Germany)1 (1. WZB Berlin Social Science Center)

  • European values are framed as a way of European governance – promote as an alternative to the Chinese restrictive and the US liberal model

Towards a “federated sovereignty”? Mobilizations of decentralized platforms for (European) digital autonomy
» Dr. Ksenia Ermoshina (France)1, Prof. Francesca Musiani (France)2 (1. Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Centre Internet et Société, 2. Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), France)

  • The Fediverse is the central focus of this research, requires a high level of technical knowledge
  • Federation sits between digital sovereignty and federation networks – less technical knowledge is required
  • This is relevant in a post Twitter world where users are lookign for new forms of communication (i.e. Mastodon, Matrix, Delta Chat)
  • RQ: How are ‘alternative projects’ adopted by European public institutions
  • Federation and sovereignty – encourages interoperability between services beyond proprietary silos
  • 4 Cs of Federation: Compatibility, Community, Customization, Care
  • Moving from platform sovereignty towards protocol sovereignty
  • Q: how has PSM as a particular kind of European public institution adopted (or not) federation sovereignty?

Politics, Privacy or Soft Power: TikTok Ban in the U.S. at the State Level
» Dr. wenhong chen (United States)1 (1. University of Texas at Austin)

  • US Federal policy tools that can be used to implement a TikTok ban: Legislative, Executive, Judiciary
  • CFIUS – the Committee for Foreign Trade in the US – these talks have been going on for several years and it has shifted from Federal to State level politics

Informational Ethos and Digital Sovereignty: Technologies, Neoliberalism, and Coloniality
» Dr. José Cláudio Castanheira (Brazil)1 (1. Fluminense Federal University (UFF))

  • Brazilian Liberal (Right Wing) Conference – hoihgly attended by Googel, Meta and CapCut who presented practical tutorials on how to produce automated videos and content.
  • Zuckerberg et al. was supporting the activities of this party
  • There is an environment of ‘congress is the enemy of the people’
  • AI politics in Brazil – They do not meet the needs of Brazilians (Barros; Vaz 2023)

CPT – Emerging Digital Technologies Policies and Laws in South Asia Beyond Geopolitical Approach

Policy Rhetoric to Practice: The Case of Streaming Services in India
» Ms. Shubhangi Heda (Australia)1 (1. Queensland University of Technology)

  • Viewing experience as a regulatory variable is ignored
  • State intervention is inevetiable

Dynamics of Elite Capture on Media Regulation: Policies and Practices in Pakistan
» Dr. Mahnoor Farooq (Pakistan)1, Dr. Shabana Naveed (Pakistan)2 (1. University of Haripur, 2. Lahore Garrison University)

Secretive Digital State: Hidden Policy Documents and the Issues of Transparency and Accountability of the National Identification System in Nepal
» Dr. Harsha Man Maharjan (Qatar)1 (1. Northwestern University in
Qatar)

Communication Policies of a Digital Authoritarian Regime in Bangladesh
» Dr. Anis Rahman (United States)1 (1. University of Washington)