10.5281/zenodo.1122633
https://zenodo.org/records/1122633
oai:zenodo.org:1122633
Andreotti, Alberta
Alberta
Andreotti
University of Milano-Bicocca
Anselmi, Guido
Guido
Anselmi
University of Milano-Bicocca
Eichhorn, Thomas
Thomas
Eichhorn
University of Leipzig
Etter, Michael
Michael
Etter
Copenhagen Business School
Fieseler, Christian
Christian
Fieseler
BI Norwegian Business School
Hoffmann, Christian Pieter
Christian Pieter
Hoffmann
University of Leipzig
Jürss, Sebastian
Sebastian
Jürss
University of Leipzig
Lutz, Christoph
Christoph
Lutz
BI Norwegian Business School
Micheli, Marina
Marina
Micheli
University of Milano-Bicocca
Newlands, Gemma
Gemma
Newlands
BI Norwegian Business School
Ranzini, Giulia
Giulia
Ranzini
VU Free University Amsterdam
Stanoevska-Slabeva, Katarina
Katarina
Stanoevska-Slabeva
University of St. Gallen
Vermeulen, Ivar
Ivar
Vermeulen
University of St. Gallen
Ps2Share – Participation, Privacy, and Power in the Sharing Economy
Zenodo
2017
Sharing Economy
Privacy
Participation
Power
Platforms
Digital Divide
Digital Inequality
Motives
Trust
Ratings
Fairness
Digital Media
Peer-to-Peer
Commerce
Home-Sharing
Ride-Sharing
Uber
Airbnb
BlaBlaCar
Internet
International
Europe
2017-12-21
eng
10.5281/zenodo.1122632
https://zenodo.org/communities/eu
1.0
This data set contains:
Cleaned data files of the 2017 survey on participation, privacy, and power in the sharing economy across 12 countries. Data are in sav (for SPSS), xlsx, and csv format.
Survey questionnaires in 10 languages (zipped PDFs)
Methodological Appendix
This EU Horizon 2020 Research Project: Ps2Share was concerned with questions of participation, privacy, and power in the sharing economy. With funding granted by the European Commission's Horizon 2020 Growth Strategy, this one-year research project was conducted by a consortium of international researchers from Norway, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy, Denmark, and Switzerland.
The emergence of innovative platforms has extended the notion of online sharing to the vibrant new domain of sharing of material goods and services. We call this phenomenon 'the sharing economy'. With companies such as Airbnb, Uber, Taskrabbit, and Transferwise dominating the market, user numbers of sharing services have skyrocketed and expect to grow further, enabling ever new avenues of economic and social interaction to appear.
The sharing economy promises to provide more inclusive business opportunities for individuals of various skills levels and resource endowment. However, the public rhetoric of chances, growth, and inclusion frequently contrasts with the risks, concerns, disadvantages, and exclusion in the experience of a variety of users. These platforms, extending into the private and physical realm of their users, create compound privacy risks and increase the potential for exclusion and discrimination through ratings-based sanctioning. In facing the ongoing growth of the sharing economy, we are presented with a variety of challenges, which need to be addressed.
With our research, we hope to facilitate public deliberation on desirable practices and policies. Our overarching objective is to identify key challenges of the sharing economy and improve Europe’s digital services through providing recommendations to Europe’s institutions. These will include schools and companies, as well as governmental and non-governmental organisations.
In constructing policy, we aim to provide steps toward more modern regulatory and policymaking approaches, helping to create a more balanced digitized economy that is socially acceptable to all. We aim to foster better awareness of the consequences which technologies, networks, and new digital media have on the way people behave, think, interact, and socialise as persons, citizens, workers, and consumers across Europe.
Further information and reports can be found at www.ps2share.eu
Contact:
Professor Christian Fieseler, BI Norwegian Business School, christian.fieseler@bi.no
European Commission
10.13039/501100000780
732117
Participation, Privacy and Power in the Sharing Economy