Erasmus University Rotterdam

Digital Governance

Science EN ↓ 13 episodes

This podcast series is dedicated to digital governance. Digital governance is broadly understood as the legal and institutional rules which provide the framework in which digitalization unfolds. The podcasts will be centered around the research done by our DIGOV fellows. We will publish a series of podcasts, which are made using the AI tool Notebook LM. Each podcast will discuss a different article or book chapter, all within the broad framework of digital governance. The podcast series starts with fundamental reflections about responsibility of AI agents. Who is liable when AI is involved in...

Author

Erasmus University Rotterdam

Category

Science

Podcast website

digov.eu

Latest episode

Jun 18, 2026

Where to listen?

Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soon

Podcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts

Get it on Google Play Install for free Android 5M+ downloads · 4.8 rating iOS soon

Episodes

How the GDPR became the global privacy rulebook 18.06.2026

Path Dependence and Network Effects of the GDPR This article analyzes the global dominance of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) through the theoretical lenses of path dependence and network effects. The authors describe how historical decisions created a self-reinforcing legal trajectory, leading to a "lock-in" phase where the EU standard prevails as the primary global framework. They...

Data Governance - Treating Data like Nuclear Fuel 02.06.2026

This podcast explores the evolving legal and economic framework of data ownership, questioning whether current property rights adequately address the unique challenges of the digital economy. A governance crisis is identified where the United States faces "constitutional inversion" due to dominant tech platforms, while China operates under a system of state-driven digital arbitrariness. To resolve...

AI and Children: A Framework for Digital Development and Protection 20.05.2026

This whitepaper examines the integration of artificial intelligence into the daily lives of children and adolescents, focusing on its role in education, social media, and leisure activities. The authors highlight how AI can foster educational equity and individualized learning while simultaneously posing risks to the cognitive and emotional development of young users. Key concerns addressed includ...

Between Self-interest and Public Welfare – the Role of Policy Advisors 10.02.2026

The article investigates the complex relationship between academic experts and the political sphere, highlighting how scientific policy advice is often hindered by a lack of empirical consensus and a prevailing reproduction crisis in research. Moving beyond the ideal of objective guidance, the authors apply an economic lens to reveal that both politicians and advisors are frequently driven by self...

Digital vulnerability in the era of AI 10.02.2026

The European Union has introduced the AI Act, aimed at establishing a comprehensive framework for regulating AI systems according to the level of risk they pose. This podcast focuses on the ex post dimension of digital vulnerability, identifying four obstacles that hinder individuals from seeking remedies through tort liability: the difficulty in identifying harm, the presence of pure economic los...

What Do Privacy Scholars Maximize? – Law as a Practice and Law as a Science. 22.08.2025

Ignacio Cofone’s book “The Privacy Fallacy” is the starting point for a methodological discussion about how the notion of privacy is approached by law. It is distinguished between law as a practice and law as science. The first is a technique of conflict resolution, while the latter derives empirically testable hypotheses from a theory. In “The Privacy Fallacy” we find both. Epistemological proble...

Autonomous Decision-Making as a Challenge for Legal Research. 01.07.2025

To get a better understanding of the fundamental problem that economic analysis of law has with autonomous decision-making, different routes for solving the problem are scrutinized. The analysis shows that the toolbox of Law and Economics does not yet provide a clear answer. Doctrinal law can also give no conclusive answers. Instead, this contribution proposes taking a closer look into legal histo...

GDPR and abuse of right 16.05.2025

The GDPR has shaken up the world for both businesses and consumers. New rights and obligations have emerged, and many revolve around various data protection requests. The recent case C-307/22 was analysed by Larisa Munteanu in a brief study that highlights how inconsistency may arise from attempted consistency, at EU level:  Can "abusive requests" be both the genre and the species in certain circu...

What Shall we do with the Drunken Sailor? Product Safety in the Aftermath of 3D Printing. 13.05.2025

3D-printing aligns the digital and the material world. It questions the necessity of large scale production facilities for producing homogenous cheap products. It also questions the distinction between producer and consumer. This has very tangible repercussions for attributing liability. The podcast is guided by the paper ‘What shall we do with the drunken sailor? Product safety in the aftermath o...

Lobbying and social media: science communication as a case study. 13.05.2025

Social media has profoundly changed the communication between scientists and the public. Social media allows scientists to instantly communicate their sometimes not peer-reviewed research results to a wide audience. This gives scientists the chance to get political influence, although the research results are possibly wrong. What are the motives and interests of scientists being engaged on social...

Liability of Artificial Intelligence Systems – or: In Search of Lost Time. 13.05.2025

AI causes accountability gaps, but there is not yet a methodological toolkit to close those gaps. What are the problems of the contemporary methods? A distinction is made between law as practice and law as science. Legal history is proposed as a source of inspiration for today’s legal problems of AI. The discussion is guided by an academic chapter called “Liability of artifical intelligence system...

What can epistemology and moral philosophy teach law? 13.05.2025

This podcast asks on the most basic level, what the legal options are for giving AI legal status. This means a rigorous analysis of the relation between human and non-human decision makers. The podcast involves the question of consciousness, the meaning of legal personhood and a discussion of contractarian approaches. Only a good knowledge of these issues lays the fundament for legal reasoning of...

Bridging the accountability gap of artificial intelligence – What can be learned from Roman law? 07.05.2025

AI creates new problems for the attribution of responsibility. The incumbent law is not yet ready to close those gaps of responsibility. The look back into Roman Law might be helpful to get an idea of how the past dealt with autonomous agents and liability. Especially, how the Romans integrated slaves as decision making agents in their business transactions, is worth getting deeper into. The podca...

Listen to the Digital Governance podcast in Replaio

Radio and podcasts in one app - free, with no sign-up. Install today and do not miss the launch

Get it on Google Play

Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.