Decision Provenance: Harnessing Data Flow for Accountable Systems

Demand is growing for more accountability regarding the technological systems that increasingly occupy our world. However, the complexity of many of these systems-often systems-of-systems-poses accountability challenges. A key reason for this is because the details and nature of the information flow...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE access 2019, Vol.7, p.6562-6574
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Jatinder, Cobbe, Jennifer, Norval, Chris
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description Demand is growing for more accountability regarding the technological systems that increasingly occupy our world. However, the complexity of many of these systems-often systems-of-systems-poses accountability challenges. A key reason for this is because the details and nature of the information flows that interconnect and drive systems, which often occur across technical and organizational boundaries, tend to be invisible or opaque. This paper argues that data provenance methods show much promise as a technical means for increasing the transparency of these interconnected systems. Specifically, given the concerns regarding ever-increasing levels of automated and algorithmic decision-making, and so-called "algorithmic systems" in general, we propose decision provenance as a concept showing much promise. Decision provenance entails using provenance methods to provide information exposing decision pipelines: chains of inputs to, the nature of, and the flow-on effects from the decisions and actions taken (at design and run-time) throughout systems. This paper introduces the concept of decision provenance, and takes an interdisciplinary (tech-legal) exploration into its potential for assisting accountability in algorithmic systems. We argue that decision provenance can help facilitate oversight, audit, compliance, risk mitigation, and user empowerment, and we also indicate the implementation considerations and areas for research necessary for realizing its vision. More generally, we make the case that considerations of data flow, and systems more broadly, are important to discussions of accountability, and complement the considerable attention already given to algorithmic specifics.
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subjects Accountability
algorithmic & automated decision-making
Algorithms
data management
Data protection
Decision making
GDPR
governance
Information flow
IoT
Law
machine learning
privacy
Process control
provenance
security
systems of systems
transparency
title Decision Provenance: Harnessing Data Flow for Accountable Systems
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