Trafficking Data: How China is Winning the Battle for Digital Sovereignty
On August 6, 2020, the Trump Administration issued a ban on TikTok in the United States, requiring that the owner—Beijing-based Bytedance—sell the company to American investors or shut it down. American suitors like Walmart and Oracle tried to make a deal with Bytedance to keep the platform operating in the U.S., but the Chinese government refused the sale on national security grounds.
In her new book, Trafficking Data: How China is Winning the Battle for Digital Sovereignty, author Aynne Kokas looks at how technology firms in the two largest economies in the world—the United States and China—have exploited government policy (and the lack thereof) to gather information on citizens, putting US national security at risk. Kokas argues that U.S. government leadership failures, Silicon Valley's disruption fetish, and Wall Street's addiction to growth have fueled China's technological goldrush. In turn, American complacency yields an unprecedented opportunity for Chinese firms to gather data in the United States and quietly send it back to the Chinese government who capitalize on this data for political gain.
In Trafficking Data, Aynne Kokas:
-Looks at urgent questions about social media, technology, and privacy globally
-Drawing on years of insider fieldwork in the United States and China, Kokas shows how data exploitation is used for commercial profit and political gain in trade between the U.S. and China
-Explores the international consequences of U.S. companies and government having ignored data regulation in favor of the explosive and unchecked growth of Silicon Valley
-Argues that China is emerging as the major shaper of global information and technology governance, in part through the United States' lack of attention to internet policy
-Makes recommendations to mitigate economic and security issues resulting from the data trade between the US and China
In her new book, Trafficking Data: How China is Winning the Battle for Digital Sovereignty, author Aynne Kokas looks at how technology firms in the two largest economies in the world—the United States and China—have exploited government policy (and the lack thereof) to gather information on citizens, putting US national security at risk. Kokas argues that U.S. government leadership failures, Silicon Valley's disruption fetish, and Wall Street's addiction to growth have fueled China's technological goldrush. In turn, American complacency yields an unprecedented opportunity for Chinese firms to gather data in the United States and quietly send it back to the Chinese government who capitalize on this data for political gain.
In Trafficking Data, Aynne Kokas:
-Looks at urgent questions about social media, technology, and privacy globally
-Drawing on years of insider fieldwork in the United States and China, Kokas shows how data exploitation is used for commercial profit and political gain in trade between the U.S. and China
-Explores the international consequences of U.S. companies and government having ignored data regulation in favor of the explosive and unchecked growth of Silicon Valley
-Argues that China is emerging as the major shaper of global information and technology governance, in part through the United States' lack of attention to internet policy
-Makes recommendations to mitigate economic and security issues resulting from the data trade between the US and China
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISBN
9780197620502
Publication date
1 Jan 2022 – 30 Nov 2022
Specialisation
Social Sciences
Theme
International Relations and Politics
Media
Human Rights
Globalisation
Economy
Region
Global Asia (Asia and other parts of the World)
China