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Reducing Corruption and Protecting Privacy in Emerging Economies: The Potential of Neuroeconomic Gamification and Western Media Regulation in Trust Building and Economic Growth

Reducing Corruption and Protecting Privacy in Emerging Economies: The Potential of Neuroeconomic Gamification and Western Media Regulation in Trust Building and Economic Growth
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Author(s): Jonathan Bishop (Centre for Research into Online Communities and E-Learning Systems, European Parliament, Belgium)
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 13
Source title: Economic Behavior, Game Theory, and Technology in Emerging Markets
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Bryan Christiansen (PryMarke, LLC, USA)and Muslum Basilgan (Uludağ University, Turkey)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-4745-9.ch013

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Abstract

This chapter presents a location-based affective computing system, which can assist growing emerging markets by helping them reduce crime and increase public safety when used in conjunction with CCTV. Internet systems based on location-based services have increased in availability. Social platforms such as Twitter and Facebook now employ the information on user locations to provide context to their posts, and services such as Foursquare rely on people checking into different places, often to compete with their friends and others. Location-based information, when combined with other records, such as CCTV, promotes the opportunity for a better society. People normally abused by corrupt state officials for crimes they did not commit will now have alibis, shops will be able to more effectively build trust and procure new customers through “social proof,” and other forms of corruption will be tackled such as benefit fraud and tax evasion. Trust that everyone is paying his or her fair share can develop.

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