Purpose
– This paper aims to provide a critical assessment of the Internet of things (IoT) and the social and policy issues raised by its development. While the Internet will continue to become ever more central to everyday life and work, there is a new but complementary vision for an IoT, which will connect billions of objects – “things” like sensors, monitors, and radio-frequency identification devices – to the Internet at a scale that far outstrips use of the Internet as we know it, and will have enormous social and economic implications.
Design/methodology/approach
– It is based on a review of literature and emerging developments, including synthesis of a workshop and discussions within a special interest group on the IoT.
Findings
– Nations can harvest the potential of this wave of innovation not only for manufacturing but also for everyday life and work and the development of new information and services that will change the way we do things in many walks of life. However, its success is not inevitable. Technical visions will not lead inexorably to successful public and private infrastructures that support the vitality of an IoT and the quality of everyday life and work. In fact, the IoT could undermine such core values as privacy, equality, trust and individual choice if not designed, implemented and governed in appropriate ways.
Research limitations/implications
– There is a need for more multi-disciplinary research on the IoT.
Practical implications
– Policymakers and opinion formers need to understand the IoT and its implications.
Social implications
– If the right policies and business models are developed, the IoT will stimulate major social, economic and service innovations in the next years and decades.
Originality/value
– This paper pulls together discussions and literature from a social science perspective, as one means to enable more multidisciplinary studies of emerging developments.
The rise of the press, radio, television and other mass media enabled the development of an independent institution: the 'Fourth Estate', central to pluralist democratic processes. The growing use of the Internet and related digital technologies is creating a space for networking individuals in ways that enable a new source of accountability in government, politics and other sectors. This paper explains how this emerging 'Fifth Estate' is being established and why this could challenge the influence of other more established bases of institutional authority. It discusses approaches to the governance of this new social and political phenomenon that could nurture the Fifth Estate's potential for supporting the vitality of liberal democratic societies.network society, information and communication technologies, democratic institutions, political studies, media studies, fourth estate,
The present meta-research of past-studies on personal computers in American households examines (1) factors related to the adoption of computing, (2) how personal computers are used in households, and (3) the social implications that extend from these patterns of adoption and use of computing in the household. Our meta-research of eleven surveys of the diffusion of home computers shows that formal education is a strong factor in explaining the adoption and use of home computers. Instrumental uses of home computers are increasing more rapidly than are entertainment uses. Changes in leisure-time activities, such as decreased television viewing, are found in adopting households. Such longer-range negative impacts of home computing as gender gaps and socioeconomic inequality are noted as topics for future research.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.