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The concept of digitalization captures the widespread adoption of
digital technologies in our lives, in the structure and functioning
of organizations and in the transformation of our economy and
society. Digital technologies for data processing and communication
underly high-impact innovations including the Internet of Things,
wireless multimedia, artificial intelligence, big data, enterprise
platforms, social networks and blockchain. These digital
innovations not only bring new opportunities for prosperity and
wellbeing but also affect our behaviors, activities, and daily
lives. They enable and shape new forms of production and new
working practices in sectors such as manufacturing, healthcare,
logistics and supply chains, energy, and public and business
services. Digital innovations are not purely technological but form
part of comprehensive systemic innovations of a sociotechnical and
networked nature, requiring the alignment of technology, processes,
organizations, and humans. Examples are platform-based work,
customer driven value creating networks, and urban public service
systems. Building on widespread networking, algorithmic decisions
and sharing of personal data, these innovations raise intensive
societal and ethical debates regarding key issues such as data
sovereignty and privacy intrusion, business models based on data
surveillance and negative externalization, quality of work and
jobs, and market dominance versus regulation. In this context, this
book focuses on the implications of digitalization for the domain
of work. The book studies the changing nature of work as well as
new forms of digitally enabled organizations, work practices and
cooperation. The book sheds light on the technological, economic,
and political forces shaping the new world of work and on the
prospects for human-centric and responsible innovations. To this
end, the book brings together a number of studies in five major
topics: 1. The evolution of digital technology impacting ways of
working; 2. The role of artificial intelligence in new ways of
working; 3. Transformation of work, jobs and employment; 4.
Digitalization and need for skills and competencies; and 5. New
forms of decentralized working and cooperation.
The Internet as we know it today is the result of a continuous
activity for improving network communications, end user services,
computational processes and also information technology
infrastructures. The Internet has become a critical infrastructure
for the human-being by offering complex networking services and
end-user applications that all together have transformed all
aspects, mainly economical, of our lives. Recently, with the advent
of new paradigms and the progress in wireless technology, sensor
networks and information systems and also the inexorable shift
towards everything connected paradigm, first as known as the
Internet of Things and lately envisioning into the Internet of
Everything, a data-driven society has been created. In a
data-driven society, productivity, knowledge, and experience are
dependent on increasingly open, dynamic, interdependent and complex
Internet services. The challenge for the Internet of the Future
design is to build robust enabling technologies, implement and
deploy adaptive systems, to create business opportunities
considering increasing uncertainties and emergent systemic
behaviors where humans and machines seamlessly cooperate.
Dieser Buchtitel ist Teil des Digitalisierungsprojekts Springer
Book Archives mit Publikationen, die seit den Anfangen des Verlags
von 1842 erschienen sind. Der Verlag stellt mit diesem Archiv
Quellen fur die historische wie auch die disziplingeschichtliche
Forschung zur Verfugung, die jeweils im historischen Kontext
betrachtet werden mussen. Dieser Titel erschien in der Zeit vor
1945 und wird daher in seiner zeittypischen politisch-ideologischen
Ausrichtung vom Verlag nicht beworben.
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