03181cam a2200409 i 450000100090000000300070000900500170001600800410003301000170007402000300009102000180012102000260013902000180016504000210018304200080020404300210021205000250023310000340025824500960029226000110038826400530039930000270045233600260047933700280050533800270053350400510056052017580061165000240236965000370239365000180243065000340244865000630248265000460254565300220259165500240261377601340263722643843US-DLC20231128081516.0220609s2023 nyu b 001 0 eng  a 2022024271 a9780197620502q(hardback) z9780197620519 z9780197620526q(epub) z9780197620533 aaubengerdacau apcc aa-cc---an-us---00aHD30.3815b.K65 20231 aKokas, Aynne,d1979-eauthor.10aTrafficking data :bhow China is winning the battle for digital sovereignty /cAynne Kokas. c©2023 1aNew York, NY :bOxford University Press,c©2023 axx, 335 pages ;c24 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier aIncludes bibliographical references and index. a"Trafficking Data argues that the movement of human data across borders for political and financial gain is disenfranchising consumers, eroding national autonomy, and destabilizing sovereignty. Focusing on the United States and China, it traces how US government leadership failures, Silicon Valley's disruption fetish, and Wall Street's addiction to growth have yielded an unprecedented opportunity for Chinese firms to gather data in the United States and quietly send it back to China, and by extension, the Chinese government. Such "data trafficking," as the book names this insidious phenomenon, is enabled by the competing governance models of the world's two largest economies: mass government data aggregation in China and impenetrable corporate data management policies in the United States. China is stepping up its data trafficking efforts through national regulations, soft power persuasion, and tech investment, extending the scope of state control over domestic and international data and tech infrastructure, and thereby expanding its global influence. The United States, by contrast, is retreating from participation in foreign alliances, international organizations, and the systemic regulation of the tech industry-practices with the potential to counter data trafficking. Confronting data trafficking as the defining international competition of the twenty-first century, this book ultimately advocates for an alternative future of data stabilization. To stem data trafficking and stabilize data flows, it shows, policymakers can synthesize tools from across the private sector, public sector, multi-national organizations, and consumers to protect users, secure national sovereignty, and establish valuable international standards"-- 0aData miningzChina. 0aData sovereigntyzUnited States. 0aData privacy. 0aBusiness intelligencezChina. 0aPersonal information managementxPolitical aspectszChina. 0aDisclosure of informationzUnited States. aData trafficking. 02localaPrint books.08iOnline version:aKokas, Aynne, 1979-tTrafficking datadNew York : Oxford University Press, 2023z9780197620519w(DLC) 2022024272