Next Article in Journal
Energy Efficient Communications for Reliable IoT Multicast 5G/Satellite Services
Next Article in Special Issue
25 Years of Bluetooth Technology
Previous Article in Journal
Improving Forensic Triage Efficiency through Cyber Threat Intelligence
Previous Article in Special Issue
A Choreography-Based and Collaborative Road Mobility System for L’Aquila City
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Platform Economy and Techno-Regulation—Experimenting with Reputation and Nudge

1
National Institute for Public Policy Analysis (INAPP), 00198 Rome, Italy
2
Department of Computer Science, University of Salerno, 84084 Fisciano, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Future Internet 2019, 11(7), 163; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi11070163
Submission received: 27 May 2019 / Revised: 11 July 2019 / Accepted: 15 July 2019 / Published: 23 July 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue 10th Anniversary Feature Papers)

Abstract

:
In the cloud-based society, where the vast majority of social, economic and personal interactions is mediated by information communication technology (ICT), technology is no longer simply a subject of regulation but is becoming an integral part of the regulatory process. Techno-regulation, the “intentional influencing of individuals’ behavior by building norms into technological devices,” is inspiring new ways to support legal safeguards through hardware and software tools, technical solutions allowing the creation of legal relations, hampering breaches of law and even promoting norm compliance. This paper touches on these issues by focusing on Digital Labor Platforms, one of the most relevant phenomena in the gig economy. We present a research project exploring innovative techno-regulatory solutions to protect gig economy workers. The idea is to integrate, in the same strategy, legal principles, regulatory objectives and software solutions. Our attention focuses on two results of our activity—a techno-regulatory model relying on reputational mechanisms to affect the behavior of digital labor market operators and GigAdvisor, a cross-platform experimental application implementing the model.

1. Introduction

Over the last decades, the spread of information and communication technologies has triggered a pervasive change at all levels of human society. In an era in which information communication technologies (ICT) shape economies and even institutions [1], new regulatory mechanisms are needed to order a “hybrid” reality in which technologies and social activities melt in an inextricable whole. This scenario raises new challenges to legal systems and public authorities—traditional regulations and policies often look unsuitable to safeguard rights in digital settings. As witnessed by the evolution of privacy enhancing technologies [2,3,4], legal safeguards are increasingly bound to be conceived and developed together with the technological ones.
The issue can be traced back to “techno-regulation,” an emerging regulatory paradigm that can be in the first place defined as “the effectuation of norms through technical means at various levels such as rule-making, implementation, monitoring and enforcement” [5]. Taking hold in all the scenarios where social and economic interactions are mediated by ICT, techno-regulation confronts us with a perspective in which technology is at once subject to, and an active part of, the regulatory process. Due to this hybrid nature, techno-regulation raises issues on the legal level and, at the same time, presents challenges for both computer science and computational legal research. The idea of implementing normative strategies through digital technologies, indeed, calls not only for adequate regulatory frames but also for IT solutions that properly support legal safeguards.
This work presents an ongoing project facing the development of techno-regulatory solutions that focuses, in particular, on the gig economy scenario. Stemming from a collaboration between computational legal scholars and computer scientists that draws also from two university classes “Computational Intelligence and Techno-regulation: paradigms, methods, tools”, a Ph.D. course taught at Department of Computer Science of the University of Salerno, and “Law and computational social science”, a class taught at the Department of Law, Economics, Management and Quantitative Methods of the University of Sannio—the initiative explores the possibility of strengthening existing labor law safeguards for Digital Labor Platforms (hereinafter DLPs) workers by integrating legal and technological remedies. The analysis proposed here focuses on the technological component of a broader techno-regulative strategy currently under development, which will require the active involvement of DLPs and Public Administration. Specifically, we introduce GigAdvisor, a cross-platform web application that has a twofold goal: (i) to increase transparency in the DLPs’ market and (ii) to exploit reputational mechanisms to induce fairer practices among the DLP market’s operators. IT can indeed have a profound impact in promoting trust and cooperation among economic agents especially by means of online communities, enabling the creation of low cost reputation networks of global reach.
The paper is structured as follows. Section 2 introduces the techno-regulation paradigm, sketching its evolution from its inception in the early 2000s to the present day. Section 3 describes the scenario of our research, that is, the gig and sharing economy, one of the most challenging fields for the development of techno-regulation solutions. Section 4 is devoted to the presentation of our case study: after a brief outline of a techno-regulation project’s architecture applied to DLPs, it focuses on GigAdvisor, the underlyining vision inspiring it and the technological solutions adopted for that purpose. Section 5 concludes with some considerations about both the project’s future steps and challenges.

2. Origins and Perspectives of Techno-Regulation

In the introduction, we touched on the difficulties that traditional legal remedies come across when attempting to uphold the law in digital environments—the need for technological support for legal safeguards is growing.
On closer inspection, human artifacts have always contributed to shaping the law in terms of content, complexity and ways to protect rights. The “offendicula” known since ancient Roman law—gates and shards of glass put on the edge of boundary walls—are an ante-litteram example of this—a way to protect rights relating to physical goods (an orchard, a house) from threats taking place in the physical world, using physical artifacts. In the information society, where the goods to be protected are often intangible just like the threats against them, technology retains its role. Contexts that could be cited in this regard are manifold, just think about the use scenarios of robots and drones.
A special place should anyway be acknowledged for the Internet, a universe that is deeply connected with the idea of algorithmic governance. It is no accident that the theoretical reflection on techno-regulation went along with the rise and evolution of the World Wide Web. An indirect confirmation of this relation can be found by analyzing the number of scientific publications dealing with techno-regulation over the years. The trend shows how the development of interest in the regulatory use of technology coincides with the emergence of Web 2.0 (see Figure 1). The Internet is not only the place where the normative role of code has been identified and discussed for the first time but it has also provided legal scholars with cues about the possibility of purposely using the code, computational tools and web technologies to implement legal safeguards.
In this respect, it makes sense to cast a glance at the contributions coming from those legal scholars that have so far paid more attention to the impact of information technologies on the law and its phenomenology. A cursory review can turn useful to better understand the evolution that led to the emergence of current vision of techno-regulation.
The debate started with a group of scholars that first realized how, throughout the internet, technology plays a regulatory role. Back in 1997, Joel Reidenberg [6], director of the Fordham Center on Law and Information Policy, highlighted how technical standards and design choices on the web actually impose rules, just like legal rule-making does. Policies—in the narrow sense of protocols but also policies in the broadest sense—are embedded into the design of technological systems, similar to what happens in “privacy by design” [7]. This vision is taken to the extreme by Lawrence Lessig [8], from Stanford Center for Internet Society, with his claim that in cyberspace “code is law.”
Over the years, the way of looking at the potential intersection between law and technology has turned into the idea of exploiting technology to regulate economic and social relationships both online and offline. The philosopher of law, Roger Brownsword, was one of the earliest to explicitly state that technological infrastructures supporting our transactions and interactions are set “to join law, morals and religion” as “one of the main instruments of social control and order” [9]. A bolder consideration is that of Primavera De Filippi when claiming that, in some ways, technical rules can be even more effective than traditional legal norms [10]. While the latter merely stipulates what people shall or shall not do, the former determine what people can or cannot do in the first place [10]. According to De Filippi, this actually “eliminates the need for any third party enforcement authority to intervene after the fact, in order to punish those who infringed the law.”
The transition we are talking about is somehow accomplished with the concept of “code-driven law” recently sketched to identify “self-executing” statutes and contracts directly written into computer code. In the vision proposed by Mireille Hildebrandt [11], code-driven law gives rise to a completely new kind of normativity: “the upcoming integration of computational law into mainstream legal practice” is going to “transform the very nature of existence of law”.
The definition that best summarizes all the facets of techno-regulation is probably the one proposed in Reference [12] that describes it as the “intentional influencing of individuals’ behavior by building norms into technological devices.” In this case, the attention is put not only on automated enforcement of legal norms but also on the possibility to nudge people. The perspective extends the concept of techno-regulation to include the design of technical solutions aimed to affect behaviors by promoting norm compliance through targeted warnings or suggestions [12,13]. Ultimately, early forms of ICT-enabled techno-regulation date back to the 2000s with Digital Right Management (DRM), a way to implement copyright law safeguards into technological means by limiting the copy of multimedia contents. Since then, technological development and research at the boundaries between law and computer science has led to more sophisticated ways to integrate regulation and IT.
A review of the most interesting proposals and experiments is offered in Reference [14]. The authors of Reference [15] deal with the dangerousness of 3D printing technology for intellectual property because the easy access to 3D printing technology makes it convenient to illegally reproduce physical objects regardless of copyright law. 3D printing threatens traditional intellectual property laws, which were created in an era when copyright infringement of physical objects was yet to come. The researchers have brought forward the legal issues and have attempted to describe a secure-streaming solution partially solving the problem of copyrights in 3D printing. The proposed approach provides the possibility for a copyright owner to limit the number of 3D prints by specifying the maximum number of copies for each manufacturer or end user. Moreover, secured streaming allows to control and detect system compromises and to stop streaming of 3D designs to printers.
Another project deals with online scams, a common risk in modern communications. The authors of Reference [16] try to tackle the issues by examining whether, in addition to experience and personal skills, technology can help to avoid risks of misuse of personal data, fraud and so on. Researchers show that the elements arousing suspicions in a skeptical and above-average vigilant Internet user can be generalized and instrumentalized through software agents. This allows such agents to help the user and give it warning, even when the user itself may not detect the danger. The authors propose a taxonomy of 18 common scam patterns ranging from the misuse of the online platforms (i.e., the purpose of the online communication platform does not match with the nature of interaction) to geo-localization mismatch (i.e., the IP address from where the scammer is connected conflicts with the declared location.) that might be used to implement an intelligent assistant.
As clearly emerges from the examples just made, the techno-regulation paradigm is already producing tools somehow capable of pursuing the same goals normally pursued by means of traditional legal instruments. We are facing an entirely new dimension of legal regulation showing different interesting aspects. A first one lies in the fact that, instead of having to be entrusted with ex-post regulations by legal bodies or the police, ‘techno-rules’ can be enforced ex-ante, making their violation impossible or still very difficult. Moreover, in contrast to traditional legal rules, intrinsically ambiguous and open to interpretation, technorules are highly formalized and leave little room for ambiguity, thus reducing the likelihood of misunderstanding and lawsuits. Based on the current debate (see, among the most recent contributions References [5,17,18,19]) and from an analysis of experiences made both in private and public contexts, we can sketch a tentative categorization of the directions taken by techno-regulation.
Fact Detection/Classification
Techno-rules and tools are first aimed at identifying facts and individuals to which particular regulatory and/or legal consequences must be linked. Activities of different types can be traced back to this category: (i) detection of breaches of norms (both private regulation and legal provisions); (ii) identification of individuals deserving protection; (iii) identification of individuals responsible for illegal/prohibited conducts.
Enforcement
The second category includes tools aiming to concretely safeguard interests protected by norms and regulations. This first turns into technical solutions materially preventing conducts regarded as harmful or illegal. Alongside these tools, designed to directly ’determine what people can or cannot do in the first place’ [10], other ‘softer forms’ of (intentional) technological influencing can be mentioned. As already emphasized by scholars in the field of Law and Technology (see References [12,13,20]), technologies may also be used to persuade or to nudge individuals promoting awareness and the compliance with rules through targeted warnings, messages and suggestions.

3. Techno-Regulation Scenarios: Platform Economy

In Section 2, we presented techno-regulation as an emergent normative practice, a general perspective in the evolution of legal safeguards meant to be applied potentially in all the scenarios in which economic, social, and personal interactions are mediated by information and communication technology. Within the digital society, there are understandably many contexts that match this description. One of these is undoubtedly represented by gig-economy, an area of the digital economy in which work is entrusted by organisations operating online platforms to connect customers directly with service-providing workers.
The gig economy is already a significant part of economic life both within the European Union (EU) [21] and worldwide and it is likely to steadily grow for the foreseeable future: a recent McKinsey report [22] finds that up to 162 million people in Europe and the United States—20 to 30 percent of the working-age population—engage in some form of independent digital work. It is no coincidence that in recent years an intense and interdisciplinary debate has developed on this topic both at European and international level (see, for example, the interesting analysis proposed in Reference [23].
Digital labor platforms (DLPs) are the cornerstone of the gig economy. Over the past decade, they have disrupted both existing business paradigms and employment models the economy relies on. DLPs foster the matching of labor supply and demand by acting as intermediaries. Taking advantage of web technologies, platforms offer new enhanced ways of matching supply and demand of labor minimizing transaction costs with a higher level of efficiency compared to traditional intermediaries. They also provide customer-oriented services and create job opportunities with flexible schedules thanks to a “pay-as-you-go” workforce [24]. Platforms are however more than just mere tools for matching labor supply and demand. Using algorithms, they manage many other aspects of labor relations. DLPs give precise instructions about time, place and fulfillment of the service. (Uber, just to give an example, provide the route and the code of conduct that drivers have to respect [25]), dynamically determine working conditions [26] and fix the wage according to criteria embedded in the algorithm parameters such as location, time, and service demand [27]. Over the years, different types of DLPs have emerged that can be classified according to different criteria—type of services requested; payment and adjudication methods (bid/defined rate); tasks complexity and control over performance. An interesting taxonomy (see Figure 2) is that proposed in a recent report by the International Labor Organization [28].
Despite their attractiveness, DLPs are not without critical aspects. A number of controversies have arisen regarding social protection for gig workers—they are not only more vulnerable to fluctuations in the availability of work but, as highlighted in recent research, they face issues with job security, low income and worker status. There are, furthermore, relevant risks resulting from the peculiarity of a remote work relationship taking place online. It is a long list: (i) rating algorithm opacity; (ii) wage-theft via refusal of work done; (iii) unilateral change of terms and conditions and pay (e.g., waivers of cancellation fees, application of discounts); (iv) changes of platforms’ fees; (v) enhanced possibility for monitoring working activities; abusive termination or “deactivation” whilst subject to lock-in effects [24].
Such a scenario clearly confronts policy makers and legislators with the challenge of drawing up strategies capable of reconciling an effective level of protection for crowd workers and the goal of economic growth. The topic is currently the subject of regulatory and political initiatives at different levels (for an overview about the EU see Reference [29]). The European Pillar of Social Rights [30], to give just a recent example, makes explicit reference to DLPs issues when listing the rights (e.g., health and safety protection, provisions on working time and rest time) to be guaranteed to employees and all workers in non-standard forms of employment.
In general terms, traditional legal remedies threaten to be inadequate to manage ongoing change and this is for several reasons. Some problems are purely legal. For example, the supranational scale of corporate structures and the modularity of technological components—often belonging to different subjects—for example, raise practical problems concerning the identification of a potential counterparty and also of the applicable law itself. In this last respect, as highlighted in Reference [31], one of the risks connected to the planetary scale of the platforms is the “choice of law and jurisdiction” that is, the implementation of strategies to choose applicable law according to criteria of convenience (e.g., a lower tax burden).
Other problems are more strictly related to the algorithmic management of crowd work, something that, using the definition proposed in Reference [32], can be described as the work setting in which “human jobs are assigned, optimized, and evaluated through algorithms and tracked data”. As highlighted above, in DLPs, algorithmic management reaches beyond directing work and scheduling to control almost all aspects of the job. Möhlmann and Zalmanson [33] define five characteristics of algorithmic management: (i) continuous tracking of workers’ behavior; (ii) constant performance evaluation of workers from client reviews but also the client’s acceptance or rejection of their work; (iii) automatic implementation of decisions, without human intervention; (iv) workers’ interaction with a “system” rather than humans, depriving them of opportunities for feedback or discussion and negotiation with their supervisor and (v) low transparency stemming from both competitive practices that keep platforms from disclosing how the algorithms work, and from the adaptive nature of the algorithms, whereby the decisions change according to the data being collected.
The development of strategies capable of coping with the complexity of the dynamics mentioned above is a very broad topic that largely transcends the objectives of this paper. What is certain is that, from a computer science point of view, it makes sense to investigate the use of technological tools to support the protection of workers and the management of the DLP market. We will talk about this in the following.

4. Implementing a Techno-Regulation Strategy for Digital Labour Platforms

In this section, we present ongoing research aimed at exploring IT solutions to implement techno-regulatory policies in the DLPs sector. The idea is to experiment with new ways to support, on the technological level, legal policies in the field of gig-economy. The case study presented in the following sections is rooted in a recent paper [34] speculating about regulatory solutions to achieve higher levels of economic security and social protection for crowd workers and people offering “work on demand via apps” [24]. To this end, the proposal (to which reference is made for more details) comes up with a “hybrid” strategy integrating different regulatory approaches. On the one hand, as we will see in Section 4.2, it tries to exploit the power of nudges—more precisely reputational ones—currently at the heart of Behavioral Law and Economics research. At the same time, far from interpreting nudge as a vehicle for deregulation [35], it aims to introduce a tighter public scrutiny over the digital labor market so as to enable a more effective control over the compliance with labor law and contracts. In line with the techno-regulation paradigm, authors try to integrate traditional legal safeguards and technological aids going towards the paradigm that Mireille Hildebrandt defines as “legal protection by design” [11]. The attempt ends up in what is called “Integrated Crowdwork System” (hereinafter ISC), a technological and regulatory public architecture supporting the above mentioned goals.
Legal solutions imagined—we dwell on them just to give an overview of the scenario the case study is placed in—aim, first of all, to favor the intervention of public administrations (national level authority in the proposal) in the crowd work market. Measures envisaged in this vein are of two types—a preemptive authorization mechanism of the DLPs to operate on the market and the mandatory registration in a public record of all the individuals interested in working with DLPs and in being recognized as virtual crowd workers. Other measures are designed for the active protection of workers—tracking and the validity for social security/pension purposes of the work activities carried out in favor of different DLPs; minimum wages; allowances for inactivity periods.
From the technological point of view, the implementation of the ISC should be supported by an integrated architecture conceived as a public intermediate layer, a “trust intermediary” [36] for the interactions between all the subjects in various ways involved in the market dynamics of the digital work: public administrations (e.g., ministries, labor inspectorates, social security institutions), crowd workers; DLPs; other actors (e.g., labor and industrial associations, potential customers and crowd workers, ordinary citizens).
In general terms, the infrastructure should support the following functions: (i) recording of the labor and financial relations between DLPs and crowd workers; (ii) collecting and exposing to the Public Administrations all data stemming from the interactions between workers and platforms; (iii) guarantee certainty and transparency in transactions; (iv) allowing the stipulation of smart contracts; (v) providing the worker with the possibility to store and have at hand all the financial and social security information of his occasional works; (vi) implementing reputation mechanisms to protect crowd workers.
To implement these functions, authors foresee an architecture based on two modules (see Figure 3). The Social Security and Contracts Module should exploit blockchain and smart contracts technology to enable and keep track of any interaction taking place in the digital labor market. The Reputation/Transparency Module should manage reputation mechanisms as well as public access to crowd work market information using two internal components: a mobile app (allowing workers to enter and interact with the ISC) and a website (allowing public access to data generated by interactions within the digital labor market).

4.1. A Case Study: Techno-Regulation and Reputational Nudge

Drawing on the architecture described above, we started a case study dealing with the development of one of the ISC’s components. We focused, in this vein, on the Reputation/Transparency Module that, for understandable reasons, can be more easily developed and tested. The implementation of a review platform, actually, can be tackled with reasonable technical effort and without necessarily involving all the actors of the architecture. On the other hand, the reputation is capable of playing a significant role in influencing the behavior of subjects operating in the digital market.
As resulting from a literature dating back to the 2000s and despite their undeniable limitations (see, among the others, References [37,38,39] reputation mechanisms can play a significant role in tackling problems related to trust and contracts’ compliance, especially in contexts where transactions take place between people/partners unfamiliar and at a distance [40]. They seems to be a valuable support to integrate the more established institutions for building trust (such as formal contracts) in electronic environments where such contractual guarantees cannot be efficiently enforced. It is useful to note that reputational systems, usually concerning sellers [41,42] rather than buyers [43], are indeed found to achieve important global effects, that is, keeping prices lower (for a review, see Reference [44]). The potential applications of online reputation mechanisms go beyond the relatively narrow domain of trust building in electronic marketplaces. The appeal of reputation mechanisms is that, when they work, they facilitate cooperation without the need for costly enforcement institutions. They have, therefore, the potential of providing more economically efficient outcomes in a wide range of moral hazard settings where societies currently rely on the threat of litigation in order to induce cooperation.
Reputation, on the other hand, is an interesting topic also because it represents one of the frontiers in the future developments of technoregulation, identified up to now above all with hard-coded, (almost) unavoidable legal rules that are enabled, or inhibited, through the technology. As highlighted in Reference [12], by focusing exclusively on regulation through the use of technologies, this domain “excludes other, “softer”, less “legal” forms of influencing [...] the fact that technologies may also be used to persuade, or to nudge, for example, is left un(der)addressed.” There are indeed scholars in the field of Law & Technology that mention softer forms of (intentional) technological influencing [13,20,45] but too often nudging, and other forms of more gentle persuasion, largely falls outside the scope of the current debate on techno-regulation. Yet, in recent years, nudge—“any small feature of the environment that attracts people’s attention and alters their behavior but does so in a way that does not compel” [46]—has become an inspiring reference point in the current debate about the frontiers of policy design (see, among the others, Reference [47]).
In the light of the above we decided to explore the integration of techno-regulatory tools with nudge strategies. We focused, in particular, on reputation mechanisms that have proven to be a powerful ally in triggering norm compliance and cooperation in digital environments [48,49,50]. As a matter of fact, recent history of DLPs (see, for instance, the case of Turkopticon [51]), which shows how the assignment of ratings can push platforms to modify their behavior to avoid drawbacks deriving from bad reputation.

4.2. The Techno-Regulatory Model: Nudging by Means of Information and Reputation

The development of the Reputation/Tranparency Module has been preceded by the definition of a regulatory model: a comprehensive definition of the normative goals and of the mechanism devised to accomplish them. Our regulatory model revolves around “information nudge” [46,52,53], that is, affecting individual and social behaviors by gathering, processing, and sharing different kinds of information. In more detail, the idea is to put together an information asset encompassing: (i) raw data (e.g., the amount of smart contracts or transactions for each DLP, spatial distribution of DLP); (ii) knowledge extracted by applying computational heuristics to raw data (e.g., insights about DLPs behavioral patterns like unfair workers rounding or other misconducts); (iii) reputational data (e.g., structured feedback provided by crowd workers, public administrations or unions about DLPs activity). In order to get an effective regulatory impact on the digital labor market, our model relies on two main factors—the number and variety of individuals reached by information and the intrinsic qualities of data conveyed by the Reputation/Tranparency Module. With regard to the first point, the goal is to reach different categories of entities:
  • Crowd workers: they can get an idea about the fairness of DLPs’ conduct, and thus make more informed decisions when applying for gigs.
  • Public authorities: administrations (e.g., labor inspectorates) can rely on trustable information highlighting DLP misconduct from an administrative and legal standpoint (e.g., breaches of labor or even criminal law).
  • DLPs: they find all the feedback on their activity in one place, having the possibility of observing the evaluations reserved for competitors. This increases the regulatory effect of the system because a bad reputation affects the possibility of finding crowd workers; on the “judgment” of public institutions; on public opinion.
  • General public: DLP’s customers, people potentially interested in gigs, unions can draw relevant information from DLPs ratings.
The quality of the information asset will be pursued, focusing on the following criteria:
  • Volume of data gathered: e.g., number of reviewed DLPs and of reviewers; data deriving from the user interaction with the module.
  • Quality of data: veracity and heterogeneity (e.g., the number of unique revewers) of reviews; extraction of actionable knowledge from raw data using computational heuristics (e.g., sentiment analysis [54] on reviews).
  • Usability: adoption of technical solutions (e.g., information visualization techniques [55,56]) allowing to ease the interaction with data.

4.3. An App for Techno-Nudging: GigAdvisor

GigAdvisor is a cross-platform experimental application aimed at implementing the “techno-nudging” [57] perspective according to the model described in Section 4.1. The tool, conceived to be part of the ISC infrastructure (Figure 3) should allow crowd workers to send and publish (controlled) feedback about their work experiences. Below, we detail the envisioned architecture and functionalities.

4.3.1. Architecture

GigAdvisor architecture integrates a website and a mobile application. To do that, we built the following 3-layer architecture (see Figure 4):
  • Frontend: this layer provides the user interface by using AngularJS [58] for the website and the Ionic [59] framework for the mobile app.
  • Backend: the layer is developed by means of Django [60], a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design. Django is free, open source, and provides high scalability and seamless integration with all the powerful libraries Python could offer, such as the Natural Language Toolkit [61], a leading platform for building Python programs to work with human language data [62].
  • Storage: in the Storage layer all data about platforms and crowd workers are stored. We selected MongoDB [63], an open source NoSQL database which grants flexibility and scalability.

4.3.2. Functionalities

The first release of GigAdvisor provides a series of functionalities—beyond basic ones such as sign in, login, and logout (Figure 5a)—to meet the need of visualizing data and providing a reputation mechanism for DLPs. Such functionalities, representing just the starting point of an ongoing project, can be summarized as follows.
Dashboard
The Dashboard (Figure 5b) shows (top-center) the amount of job offers, the number of favorite platforms which have published a job offer and a list box to browse personal and DLPs information. The list box provides three options: (i) Job Search which allows the user to search for a job and where appropriate apply for that job; (ii) My Profile accessing to the user’s personal profile with all its data; (iii) My Contracts to visualize user’s contracts summary over the time. At bottom-right in the Dashboard the user finds the “Home” button to go back to the Dashboard (always visible) and bottom-left the “Labor Platforms navigator” button to show all the platforms signed into the system.
My Contracts
Through “My Contracts” the user visualizes his job history in the gig-economy (see Figure 6a). A list box includes all the gig-works the user performed over the time (virtually in the blockchain, see Section 4) showing the (i) DLP logo, (ii) DLP’s name, (iii) a button which indicates—according to the color changing—the chances to insert or read a feedback about that DLP.
By clicking on “leave a feedback” (Figure 6b) the tool shows the unique token associated with the user’s smart contracts (binding the user, the platform and the job) which is mandatory to perform the task. With this method only true crowd workers can leave a feedback on a DLP. This token in any case will stay private as personal crowd worker data in order to prevent the identification of the user and potentially negative consequences like, for instance, reprisals on the part of the DLP.
The architecture foreseen in Figure 3 is very complex and requires the involvement of the DLPs and the Public Administration, and it foresees a smart contracts subsystem. Thus, in the Beta version of GigAdvisor the token linked with the smart contracts concluded will not be exploited. In the absence of smart contracts, crowd workers will still be able to leave feedback to DLPs they worked for, with the same difference there is in main Social Networks (e.g., Twitter, Facebook, Instagram) between a verified and not verified account. In other words, the reviews associated with smart contracts by means of the unique token will be tagged with an “authenticity mark”.
In the “Leave a feedback” section the user is allowed to (i) evaluate their experience with the DLP on various levels, by means of a “graphic equalizer”, (ii) give a title to his review, and (iii) write a review to tell all the audience their opinion. The equalizer lets the user evaluate the platforms according to a variety of criteria such as fairness, payment timeliness and appropriateness that are full of legal implications. A specific attention has been reserved to other problems frequently faced by crowd workers interacting with DLPs. We have included in the evaluation grid a series of issues identified in recent literature [64] and detailed in Table 1. The “graphic equalizer,” in the first release, allows to rate on standard criteria. The evaluation grid developed so far is the same for each DLP category. In the future we aim to draw up customized evaluation grids for each type of DLP—the criteria for a food delivery platform could be slightly different than the ones for evaluating a micro-tasking platform.
Labour Platforms Navigator
The Labour Platforms Navigator shows a list group of DLPs (Figure 7a). Once the user selects a DLP of interest (see Figure 7b)it is possible to visualize: the rating for that platform which is calculated taking into account (i) the amount of feedback received by the DLP, (ii) sentiment of the received feedback [54,69], (iii) rating from the “graphic equalizer”, (iv) timing (e.g., a DLP which was high-rated one year before with no other new feedback should be downgraded), and (v) utility of feedback.
In addition, by means “useful/not useful” button, it is possible to rate the feedback by expressing how useful the same has been. According to a dating back literature (see, among the first contribution on the topics, Reference [70]), the “evaluation of evaluators” is essential to the emergence of social norms and cooperation.
Clearly some of the showed functionalities are just “ready” in GigAdvisor, because the whole projects lacks of the Social Security and Contracts Module. Indeed, for example, in the Beta version of GigAdvisor a part of the DLPs (the most famous) is directly added but in the meantime a user will be allowed to add a new DLP he worked for.

5. Conclusions

The research presented above is still ongoing. The beta version of the GigAdvisor app is close to the release. A series of developments is already foreseen.
We are planning a trial involving crowdworkers associations so to make them available for free GigAdvisor. The trial will have several goals relating both technical aspects and overall project design choices: (i) gathering feedback on system design and functionalities; (ii) getting insights regarding additional functionalities (e.g., is the rating expressed through the right parameters or more are needed?); (iii) identifying possibile scalability and privacy problems; (iv) gaining evidence about the effectivenes of the reputation mechanisms implemented; (v) gathering data for machine learning, knowledge extraction tasks (e.g., where do the feedback come from? From which categories of workers?).
Another part of future efforts will be devoted to the upgrade of the app. As previously said, the application has been conceived in a modular way, so to allow the gradual addition of new functionalities. We have already figured out a couple of interesting developments in this perspective.
A first development will be that of providing GigAdvisor with a social-oriented component. The Social module would act as the virtual community of practice where crowdworkers can share and discuss about their experience. Another part of our efforts will be put towards the application of more advanced knowledge extraction methods to the data generated by users interacting with the app. The idea is that of endowing GigAdvisor with a Knowledge mining module with functionalities like those provided by AirBnB. AirBnB provides, for instance, a booking request’s trend prediction mechanism based upon the past timeline of bookings. Those predictions are shown to the hosts so that they can adjust their prices to the demand trends. Following the same line, in the case of crowdworkers, geo-tagged predictions about time-based patterns in the work demand could help workers in the arranging their time and job.
In more general terms, the project provided food for thought about fundamental issues in technoregulation. Actually, the impact of the techno-regulatory strategies can be more or less positive depending on our ability to intelligently merge principles, rules and priorities defined at the legal level within the technologies gradually available. The risks are many and go from the lack of transparency and controllability produced when norms and values are embedded into software code that remain hidden from view and unfathomable [17,20], to the potential sillness of technoregulatory tools unable to adapt to the concrete law enforcement context. In this scenario, research on the borders between AI and law can give an essential contribution to make more transparent, explainable [71] and therefore open to criticism the functioning of the techniques used and, at the same time, more adaptive and smart the legal enforcement mediated by technology.
Against this backdrop, new and strongly interdisciplinary research approaches are needed. Readapting the words used by Mireille Hildebrandt’s [72] techno-regulation requires a novel approach to law making addressing the challenges of technology, legitimacy, and political-legal theory, as only a “constructive and collaborative effort to migrate law from books to other technologies can ensure that techno-regulation becomes reality,” safeguarding the fundamental values underlying privacy, identity and democracy in tomorrow’s intelligent world.

Author Contributions

The research here presented has been jointly designed by all the authors that have discussed together the premises, implications and findings of the work. The authorship of the paper can be attributed as follows. N.L.: legal, computational legal science issues (Section 2, Section 3 and Section 4, Section 4.1 and Section 4.2). D.M., R.Z. and A.G.: computer science profiles of the research, system design and implementation (Section 4.3, Section 4.3.1 and Section 4.3.2). Other sections are the result of a common effort.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Acknowledgments

Authors would like to thank Margherita Vestoso for the comments and the support given in proofreading the paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Bratton, B.H. The Stack: On Software and Sovereignty; MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  2. Langheinrich, M. Privacy by design—Principles of privacy-aware ubiquitous systems. In Proceedings of the International conference on Ubiquitous Computing, Atlanta, GA, USA, 30 September–2 October 2001; pp. 273–291. [Google Scholar]
  3. Cavoukian, A. Privacy by Design in Law, Policy and Practice. A White Paper for Regulators, Decision-Makers and Policy-Makers. Available online: http://www.ontla.on.ca/library/repository/mon/25008/312239.pdf (accessed on 17 July 2019).
  4. Rachovitsa, A. Engineering and lawyering privacy by design: Understanding online privacy both as a technical and an international human rights issue. Int. J. Law Inf. Technol. 2016, 24, 374–399. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Bayamlıoğlu, E.; Leenes, R. The rule of law implications of data-driven decision-making: A techno-regulatory perspective. Law Innov. Technol. 2018, 10, 295–313. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Reidenberg, J.R. Lex informatica: The formulation of information policy rules through technology. Tex. Law Rev. 1997, 76, 553. [Google Scholar]
  7. Cavoukian, A. Privacy by Design: The 7 Foundational Principles; Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario: Toronto, ON, Canada, 2009; Volume 5. [Google Scholar]
  8. Lessig, L. Code: And Other Laws of Cyberspace. 2009. Available online: http://code-is-law.org/ (accessed on 22 July 2019).
  9. Brownsword, R. What the World Needs Now: Techno-Regulation, Human Rights and Human Dignity; Global Governance and the Quest for Justice; Hart Publishing: Oxford, UK, 2004; pp. 203–234. [Google Scholar]
  10. Hassan, S.; De Filippi, P. The Expansion of Algorithmic Governance: From Code is Law to Law is Code. Field Actions Sci. Rep. J. Field Actions 2017, 19, 88–90. [Google Scholar]
  11. CoHuBiCoL. Available online: https://www.cohubicol.com/ (accessed on 22 July 2019).
  12. Van den Berg, B.; Leenes, R.E. Abort, retry, fail: Scoping techno-regulation and other techno-effects. In Human Law and Computer Law: Comparative Perspectives; Springer: Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 2013; pp. 67–87. [Google Scholar]
  13. Hildebrandt, M. Legal protection by design: Objections and refutations. Legisprudence 2011, 5, 223–248. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Kerikmäe, T.; Rull, A. The Future of Law and Etechnologies; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2016; Volume 3. [Google Scholar]
  15. Sepp, P.M.; Vedeshin, A.; Dutt, P. Intellectual Property Protection of 3D Printing Using Secured Streaming. In The Future of Law and eTechnologies; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2016; pp. 81–109. [Google Scholar]
  16. Norta, A.; Nyman-Metcalf, K.; Othman, A.B.; Rull, A. My Agent Will Not Let Me Talk to the General? Software Agents as a Tool Against Internet Scams. In The Future of Law and eTechnologies; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2016; pp. 11–44. [Google Scholar]
  17. Hildebrandt, M. Algorithmic regulation and the rule of law. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. A Math. Phys. Eng. Sci. 2018, 376, 20170355. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  18. De Filippi, P. Blockchain and the Law: The Rule of Code; Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2018. [Google Scholar]
  19. Yeung, K. Algorithmic regulation: A critical interrogation. Regul. Gov. 2018, 12, 505–523. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Leenes, R. Framing techno-regulation: An exploration of state and non-state regulation by technology. Legisprudence 2011, 5, 143–169. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Huws, U.; Spencer, N.; Syrdal, D.S.; Holts, K. Work in the European gig economy: Research results from the UK, Sweden, Germany, Austria, The Netherlands, Switzerland and Italy. 2017. Available online: https://uhra.herts.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/2299/19922/Huws_U._Spencer_N.H._Syrdal_D.S._Holt_K._2017_.pdf?sequence=2 (accessed on 16 July 2019).
  22. James, M.; Susan, L.; Jacques, B.; Kelsey, R.; Jan, M.; Deepa, M. Independent Work: Choice, Necessity, and the Gig Economy. Available online: https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/employment-and-growth/independent-work-choice-necessity-and-the-gig-economy (accessed on 24 April 2019).
  23. Srnicek, N. Platform Capitalism; John Wiley & Sons: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 2017. [Google Scholar]
  24. De Stefano, V. The rise of the just-in-time workforce: On-demand work, crowdwork, and labor protection in the gig-economy. Comp. Labor Law Policy J. 2015, 37, 471. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Todolí-Signes, A. The ‘gig economy’: Employee, self-employed or the need for a special employment regulation? Transf. Eur. Rev. Labour Res. 2017, 23, 193–205. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Prassl, J.; Risak, M. Uber, taskrabbit, and co.: Platforms as employers-rethinking the legal analysis of crowdwork. Comp. Labor Law Policy J. 2015, 37, 619. [Google Scholar]
  27. Rosenblat, A.; Stark, L. Uber’s Drivers: Information Asymmetries and Control in Dynamic Work. 2015. Available online: https://algorithmsatwork.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/rosenblat-stark-information-asymmetries-and-control-in-dynamic-work-cscw-2016.pdf (accessed on 16 July 2019).
  28. Berg, J.; Furrer, M.; Harmon, E.; Rani, U.; Silberman, S. Digital Labour Platforms and the Future of Work. Towards Decent Work in the Online World; International Labour Office: Geneva, Switzerland, 2018.
  29. De Stefano, V.; Aloisi, A. European Legal Framework for Digital Labour Platforms; Technical Report; European Commission: Luxembourg, 2018.
  30. European Pillar of Social Rights. Available online: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+TA+P8-TA-2017-0010+0+DOC+XML+V0//EN (accessed on 27 May 2019).
  31. Felstiner, A. Labor standards. In Handbook of Human Computation; Springer: New York, NY, USA, 2013; pp. 823–836. [Google Scholar]
  32. Lee, M.K.; Kusbit, D.; Metsky, E.; Dabbish, L. Working with machines: The impact of algorithmic and data-driven management on human workers. In Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Seoul, Korea, 18–23 April 2015; pp. 1603–1612. [Google Scholar]
  33. Mohlmann, M.; Zalmanson, L. Hands on the Wheel: Navigating Algorithmic Management and Uber Drivers’ Autonomy; Association for Information Systems: Atlanta, GA, USA, 2017. [Google Scholar]
  34. De Minicis, M.; Donà, S.; Lettieri, N.; Marocco, M. Disciplina e Tutela del Lavoro Nelle Digital Labour Platform. Un Modello di Tecno-Regolazione. Inapp Working Paper No. 6. 2019. Available online: http://oa.inapp.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/371 (accessed on 16 July 2019).
  35. Bubb, R.; Pildes, R.H. How behavioral economics trims its sails and why. Harv. L. Rev. 2013, 127, 1593. [Google Scholar]
  36. Giuli, D.; Bussotti, P.; Pettenati, M.C.; Codoban, I. The role of the trust intermediary in the information and Knowledge Society. In Proceedings of the ERCIM Workshop on User Interfaces for All, Vienna, Austria, 28–29 June 2004; pp. 326–331. [Google Scholar]
  37. Dellarocas, C.; Wood, C.A. The sound of silence in online feedback: Estimating trading risks in the presence of reporting bias. Manag. Sci. 2008, 54, 460–476. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Nosko, C.; Tadelis, S. The Limits of Reputation in Platform Markets: An Empirical Analysis and Field Experiment; Technical Report; National Bureau of Economic Research: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2015. [Google Scholar]
  39. Zervas, G.; Proserpio, D.; Byers, J. A First Look at Online Reputation on Airbnb, Where Every Stay Is above Average. 2015. Available online: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2554500 (accessed on 16 July 2019).
  40. Conte, R.; Paolucci, M. Reputation in Artificial Societies: Social Beliefs for Social Order; Springer Science & Business Media: Berlin, Germany, 2002; Volume 6. [Google Scholar]
  41. Cranor, L.F.; Resnick, P. Protocols for automated negotiations with buyer anonymity and seller reputations. Netnomics 2000, 2, 1–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Bajari, P.; Hortacsu, A. Winner’s Curse, Reserve Prices and Endogenous Entry: Empirical Insights from eBay Auctions. RAND J. Econ. 2003, 34, 329–355. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Houser, D.; Wooders, J. Reputation in Internet Auctions: Theory and Evidence from eBay; Working Paper; The University of Arizona: Tucson, AZ, USA, 2000. [Google Scholar]
  44. Dewan, S.; Hsu, V. Trust in Electronic Markets: Price Discovery in Generalist Versus Specialty Online Auctions; Technical Report, Working Paper; University of Washington: Seattle, WA, USA, 2001. [Google Scholar]
  45. Goodwin, M.; Koops, B.J.; Leenes, R. Dimensions of Technology Regulation; Wolf: Nijmegen, The Netherlands, 2010. [Google Scholar]
  46. Thaler, R.H.; Sunstein, C.R. Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness; Penguin: London, UK, 2008; Volume 6. [Google Scholar]
  47. Alemanno, A.; Sibony, A.L. Nudge and the Law: A European Perspective; Bloomsbury Publishing: London, UK, 2015. [Google Scholar]
  48. Bakos, Y.; Dellarocas, C. Cooperation without enforcement? a comparative analysis of litigation and online reputation as quality assurance mechanisms. Manag. Sci. 2011, 57, 1944–1962. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Chen, P.Y.; Wu, S.Y.; Yoon, J. The impact of online recommendations and consumer feedback on sales. In Proceedings of the 2004 International Conference on Information Systems, Washington, DC, USA, 12–15 December 2004; p. 58. [Google Scholar]
  50. Dellarocas, C. The digitization of word of mouth: Promise and challenges of online feedback mechanisms. Manag. Sci. 2003, 49, 1407–1424. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  51. Silberman, M. Operating an employer reputation system: Lessons from Turkopticon, 2008–2015. Comp. Labor Law Policy J. 2015, 37, 505. [Google Scholar]
  52. John, P.; Cotterill, S.; Richardson, L.; Moseley, A.; Smith, G.; Stoker, G.; Wales, C.; Liu, H.; Nomura, H. Nudge, Nudge, Think, Think: Experimenting with Ways to Change Civic Behaviour; A&C Black: London, UK, 2013. [Google Scholar]
  53. Duflo, E.; Saez, E. The role of information and social interactions in retirement plan decisions: Evidence from a randomized experiment. Q. J. Econ. 2003, 118, 815–842. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  54. Pang, B.; Lee, L. Opinion mining and sentiment analysis. Found. Trends Inf. Retr. 2008, 2, 1–135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Keim, D.A. Information visualization and visual data mining. IEEE Trans. Vis. Comput. Graph. 2002, 8, 1–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Lettieri, N.; Guarino, A.; Malandrino, D. E-Science and the Law. Three Experimental Platforms for Legal Analytics. In Proceedings of the Legal Knowledge and Information Systems-JURIX 2018—The Thirty-first Annual Conference, Groningen, The Netherlands, 12–14 December 2018; pp. 71–80. [Google Scholar]
  57. Hildebrandt, M.; van den Berg, B. Information, Freedom and Property: The Philosophy of Law Meets the Philosophy of Technology; Routledge: Abingdon, UK, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  58. AngularJS. Available online: https://angular.io (accessed on 27 May 2019).
  59. Ionic Framework. Available online: https://ionicframework.com (accessed on 27 May 2019).
  60. Django. Available online: https://www.djangoproject.com (accessed on 9 April 2019).
  61. Natural Language Toolkit. Available online: https://www.nltk.org (accessed on 9 April 2019).
  62. Loper, E.; Bird, S. NLTK: The natural language toolkit. arXiv 2002, arXiv:cs/0205028. [Google Scholar]
  63. MongoDB Document Oriented Database. Available online: https://www.mongodb.com (accessed on 27 May 2019).
  64. McInnis, B.; Cosley, D.; Nam, C.; Leshed, G. Taking a HIT: Designing around rejection, mistrust, risk, and workers’ experiences in Amazon Mechanical Turk. In Proceedings of the 2016 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, San Jose, CA, USA, 7–12 May 2016; pp. 2271–2282. [Google Scholar]
  65. Martin, D.; Hanrahan, B.V.; O’Neill, J.; Gupta, N. Being a turker. In Proceedings of the 17th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing, Baltimore, MD, USA, 15–19 February 2014; pp. 224–235. [Google Scholar]
  66. Irani, L.C.; Silberman, M. Turkopticon: Interrupting worker invisibility in amazon mechanical turk. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Paris, France, 27 April–2 May 2013; pp. 611–620. [Google Scholar]
  67. Ipeirotis, P.G.; Horton, J.J. The need for standardization in crowdsourcing. In Proceedings of the Workshop on Crowdsourcing and Human Computation at CHI, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 7–12 May 2011. [Google Scholar]
  68. Kittur, A.; Nickerson, J.V.; Bernstein, M.; Gerber, E.; Shaw, A.; Zimmerman, J.; Lease, M.; Horton, J. The future of crowd work. In Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work, San Antonio, TX, USA, 23–27 February 2013; pp. 1301–1318. [Google Scholar]
  69. Liu, B. Sentiment analysis and opinion mining. Synth. Lect. Hum. Lang. Technol. 2012, 5, 1–167. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  70. Axelrod, R. An evolutionary approach to norms. Am. Political Sci. Rev. 1986, 80, 1095–1111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  71. Waltl, B.; Vogl, R. Explainable artificial intelligence? The new frontier in legal informatics. Juslett. IT 2018, 4, 1–10. [Google Scholar]
  72. Hildebrandt, M.; Koops, B.J. The challenges of ambient law and legal protection in the profiling era. Mod. Law Rev. 2010, 73, 428–460. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Number of papers including the word “Techno-regulation” on Google Scholar.
Figure 1. Number of papers including the word “Techno-regulation” on Google Scholar.
Futureinternet 11 00163 g001
Figure 2. Digital Labor Platforms: a classification (source: adapted from [28]).
Figure 2. Digital Labor Platforms: a classification (source: adapted from [28]).
Futureinternet 11 00163 g002
Figure 3. Integrated Crowdwork System: infrastructure. Adapted from [24].
Figure 3. Integrated Crowdwork System: infrastructure. Adapted from [24].
Futureinternet 11 00163 g003
Figure 4. GigAdvisor: the 3-layer architecture.
Figure 4. GigAdvisor: the 3-layer architecture.
Futureinternet 11 00163 g004
Figure 5. The GigAdvisor interface: (a) the home page, (b) the Dashboard.
Figure 5. The GigAdvisor interface: (a) the home page, (b) the Dashboard.
Futureinternet 11 00163 g005
Figure 6. The GigAdvisor “My Contracts” functionality. User can browse its contracts (a), and rate the DLPs he worked for (b).
Figure 6. The GigAdvisor “My Contracts” functionality. User can browse its contracts (a), and rate the DLPs he worked for (b).
Futureinternet 11 00163 g006
Figure 7. The GigAdvisor Platform Navigator. User can choose the platform (a) and explore its reviews (b).
Figure 7. The GigAdvisor Platform Navigator. User can choose the platform (a) and explore its reviews (b).
Futureinternet 11 00163 g007
Table 1. Main issues for crowd workers dealing with DLPs: a taxonomy from [64].
Table 1. Main issues for crowd workers dealing with DLPs: a taxonomy from [64].
IssueDescription
Flaws in task or interface designCrowd workers express frustration about rejections caused by task or interface design mistakes, often because they only learn about these errors after putting in the work.
Unclear evaluation criteriaRequesters can reject a task for any reason—and don’t have to give one. As in prior work [65,66], participants felt they deserve an explanation. Further, there are no clear standards for task design and performance evaluation [67].
Unresponsive, arbitrary resolution of rejectionsThe lack of an official dispute process overseen by DLPs, and the concentration of power in the hands of Requesters, exacerbate the mistrust that results from erroneous or unexplained rejections [65,66].
Lack of information on RequestersLooking at Requesters’ history can help mitigate risks, and in fact many crowd workers evaluate Requesters by studying their own work histories. But this task is time consuming because workers hardly ever have the proper tools. Positive interactions with Requesters signal that they can be trusted in the future.
Inexperienced and Unfamiliar RequestersManaging a crowd workforce is not easy, and workers recognize that Requesters who are new to a certain DLP pose a risk because of their unfamiliarity with the platformand its norms. For example, a Turker shared an experience of being blocked (i.e., banned from a Requester’s HITs and put at risk of being removed from AMT) by a Requester they had never worked for [64].
Tasks with poor returnWorkers tend to favor concrete, simple, short tasks over longer, complex and less clearly-defined ones, and as with avoiding new Requesters, this can harm both crowd workers and Requesters.
Prioritizing efficiency over qualityCrowd workers monitor their behavior while they work on a HIT to mitigate the risk of rejection. Even though workers are expressly forbidden to use scripts and bots, they still use these tools to reduce the risk of rejection. In other words, crowd workers bear the costs of developing efficient work skills, and Requesters bear the costs of work done with minimum effort just to avoid rejection. In the long term, the market as a whole suffers from failing to achieve growth, innovation, complexity, and collaboration [68].

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Lettieri, N.; Guarino, A.; Malandrino, D.; Zaccagnino, R. Platform Economy and Techno-Regulation—Experimenting with Reputation and Nudge. Future Internet 2019, 11, 163. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi11070163

AMA Style

Lettieri N, Guarino A, Malandrino D, Zaccagnino R. Platform Economy and Techno-Regulation—Experimenting with Reputation and Nudge. Future Internet. 2019; 11(7):163. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi11070163

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lettieri, Nicola, Alfonso Guarino, Delfina Malandrino, and Rocco Zaccagnino. 2019. "Platform Economy and Techno-Regulation—Experimenting with Reputation and Nudge" Future Internet 11, no. 7: 163. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi11070163

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop