This doctoral thesis advances our understanding of the legitimacy of different digital socio-technical classification systems. First, taking a system-level perspective, I explore how the Chinese government justifies and implements a nation-wide digital social credit system. Second, I investigate procedural normative choices in social media classification and study how social media users perceive normative trade-offs in this context. Finally, using qualitative and computational methods, I analyze how non-experts and people with AI-competence ethically evaluate facial analysis AI.
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This doctoral thesis advances our understanding of the legitimacy of different digital socio-technical classification systems. First, taking a system-level perspective, I explore how the Chinese government justifies and implements a nation-wide digital social credit system. Second, I investigate procedural normative choices in social media classification and study how social media users perceive normative trade-offs in this context. Finally, using qualitative and computational methods, I analyze...
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