
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It’s impossible to quantify the volume of data generated by citizens around the world. Make no mistake, though — data has become a commodity to the companies that monetize it. At the same time, governments are making laws around how to protect it, who can access it and even where to store it. These choices are guided by how leaders think data can advance their national interests, according to Gillian Diebold at the Center for Data Innovation, who just wrote an analysis on the subject. She spoke with Marketplace’s Lily Jamali about data policies in China, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Singapore and India and how they compare.
By Marketplace4.5
12471,247 ratings
It’s impossible to quantify the volume of data generated by citizens around the world. Make no mistake, though — data has become a commodity to the companies that monetize it. At the same time, governments are making laws around how to protect it, who can access it and even where to store it. These choices are guided by how leaders think data can advance their national interests, according to Gillian Diebold at the Center for Data Innovation, who just wrote an analysis on the subject. She spoke with Marketplace’s Lily Jamali about data policies in China, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Singapore and India and how they compare.

31,989 Listeners

30,666 Listeners

8,766 Listeners

923 Listeners

1,386 Listeners

1,705 Listeners

4,338 Listeners

2,176 Listeners

5,490 Listeners

56,525 Listeners

1,450 Listeners

9,517 Listeners

3,589 Listeners

6,444 Listeners

6,389 Listeners

163 Listeners

2,988 Listeners

5,512 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

90 Listeners