Towards Urban Data Commons? On The Origins And Significance Of Platform Data Sharing Mandates

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Early mandates: Select Cities Seek Data with Public Policy, While Platforms Resist Even during the era of “data philanthropy” certain cities started to expect access to sharing economy platform data, increasingly feeling the shortcomings of a voluntary “corporate charity” approach. However, in these early days, sharing economy platforms that had built a brand on “regulatory hacking” were often still heralded by members of the public, not as harmful rule breakers, but as bringing revolutionary and needed services to urban residents and visitors. Data philanthropy approaches had helped platforms enhance this good will with reputations as innovative data philanthropists donating data for the public good, despite not actually sharing data on public agency terms. With perceived public support, when local governments sought data, platforms did not always play nice, and cities—who still often lagged in leverage and in technical expertise—did not always feel they could prevail in the politics of data. As a result, only a few cities were able to enact regulations mandating data sharing. In my team’s research aggregating as many such policies as we could, we were only able to find data sharing policy mandates from six local governments prior to 2018: California’s Public Utility Commission, Chicago, Seattle, New York, Boston, and Amsterdam—all large, relatively wealthy markets and typical “early adopter” cities or states. Even policies from these “superstar” cities and states did not come without significant resistance. The California Public Utilities Commission became the first agency to mandate ride hail platform data reporting, enacting their policy in December of 2012. Tellingly, Uber refused to comply, citing concerns over driver privacy, and was fined over $7M49. In 2016, New York City’s Taxi and Limousine Commission proposed a rule change

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Victor Ngo, “Transportation Network Companies and the Ridesourcing Industry: A Review of Impacts and Emerging Regulatory Frameworks for Uber” (Vancouver: Greenest City Scholars Program, October 2015), https://learn.sharedusemobilitycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/policy-documents-4/Transportation%20 Network%20Companies%20and%20the%20Ridesourcing%20Industry%20-%20Victor%20Ngo%20-%20 Public.pdf.

Towards Urban Data Commons? On the Origins and Significance of Platform Data Sharing Mandates


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Articles inside

Individual vs. Collective Conceptions of Urban Platform Data and the Case for Managing City Data as a Commons

10min
pages 142-152

Platform Urbanism Data Sharing Policy Guidelines: Best Practice Recommendations for Practitioners

14min
pages 128-136

New Frameworks Beyond the Binary

5min
pages 138-141

Summary of High-level Insights and Observations

13min
pages 118-127

The Results: the Dataset, the “Platform Urbanism Data Sharing Policy Hub” and Resultant Policy Analysis

1hr
pages 61-117

Where Things Stand in Platform Urbanism: Controversy Over MDS and Possible Futures

2min
pages 48-51

Techlash and the Sharing Economy

2min
pages 40-41

Aggregating a Policy Dataset

5min
pages 54-57

Show Me the Policies: The Access to Information Problem

2min
pages 52-53

Policy Clean Up, Structuring, and Organizing to Create a Research Database

3min
pages 58-60

Dockless Micromobility and Post Tech-Lash Municipalism: Cities Band Together and Demand Data

8min
pages 42-47

Early mandates: Select Cities Seek Data with Public Policy, While Platforms Resist

2min
pages 38-39

Understanding the Evolution

1min
page 27

The Data Philanthropy Vision Goes Local

3min
pages 30-32

Data Sharing on Uber’s Terms

2min
pages 36-37

Urban Platform Data Philanthropy in Action: Strava Metro and Waze CCP

3min
pages 33-35

Digital Platforms, IRL Impacts: The Good, the Bad and the Disruptive

1min
page 20

Big Data and a “Data Philanthropy” Vision for Public Good

2min
pages 28-29

What is Platform Urbanism?

1min
page 17

Challenges to Democratic Rule-Making Authority and Legitimacy

5min
pages 21-24
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