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People's lives are more enmeshed with digital systems than ever before, increasing users' vulnerability and insecurity. From data leaks like the to the more recent cyberattack on , business operations and data on the internet continue to be vulnerable.
There are good reasons to believe that little will be done about these risks until .
My research suggests that there are significant failures in our current approaches to . Digital technologies remake social life through new technologies, communication platforms and forms of artificial intelligence. All of which, while very powerful, are also highly risky in terms of malfunctioning and vulnerability to being manipulated.
Yet, governments are generally unable to distinguish between what are actually valuable contributions to society and what are .
A massive social experiment
The digital economy includes " that increasingly rely upon information technology, data and the internet for their business models." The companies dominating the digital economy continue to undertake a massive social experiment where they keep the lion's share of the benefits while shunting the risks onto .
This could lead to a systemic digital crisis, ranging from a widespread breakdown of basic infrastructure, such as electricity or telecommunications due to a cyberattack, to an attack that modifies existing infrastructure to make it dangerous.
There are significant similarities between the current trajectory of the digital economy and . In particular, what we are increasingly seeing in the digital world, which we saw in the pre-crisis financial world, is what American sociologist Charles Perrow called "."
Perrow argues that when systems exhibit high levels of interconnection without sufficient redundancy to compensate for failures, it can lead to .
Likewise, high levels of complexity are generally considered to make highly interconnected systems riskier. Unanticipated risks and connections can lead to failures cascading across the system.
Increasing interdependence
Our existing digital economy shares many of these characteristics. The digital economy is characterized by a business model that focuses on businesses getting as large as possible as quickly as possible.
The lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis and the current digital economy share both the amplification of interdependency alongside the reduction of redundancy. In the case of finance, this proceeded through massive borrowing to leverage earnings, leaving a smaller ratio of money left to .
In the digital economy, this need to continually collect data among datasets, platforms, corporations and networks. This increased interdependency is fundamental to the of the digital economy.
The undermining of redundancy in the digital sphere is manifested in the in which digital companies eliminate or acquire competitors as quickly as possible while eliminating analog alternatives to their own digital networks.
Last, these digital behemoths and their rapid growth increase the complexity of the digital economy and the monopolistic networks that dominate it.
Obvious warning signs
There is a key difference between the 2008 financial crisis and the contemporary digital economy. Unlike in the lead-up to the crisis, where a partially finance-driven prosperity quieted any obvious warning signs, the warning signs in the digital economy are front and center for everyone to see.
The and each caused billions of dollars in damages. canceled thousands of flights, and even took television stations off the air. Constant hacks, ransomware attacks and data leakages are warning signs that this is a deeply fragile system.
AI has taken many of these vulnerabilities into overdrive, while adding new risks, such as AI hallucinations and the exponential growth in misinformation. The speed and scale of AI are expected to intensify existing risks to .
This is potentially the most significant, though unfortunate element in this story. There is massive system risk, yet they are not addressed directly, and the processes heightening these risks continue to accelerate.
This suggests a deeper problem in our politics. While we do have some ability to regulate after the damage is done, we struggle to prevent the next crisis.
Provided by The Conversation
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