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Millar and Gray argue that mobility shaping is raising a set of unresolved ethical, political, and legal issues that have significant consequences for shaping human experience in the future. By way of analogy, they unpack how these emerging issues in mobility echo those that have been asked in the more familiar context of net neutrality. They then apply some of the ethical and legal reasoning surrounding net neutrality to the newly relevant algorithmically controlled mobility space. They conclude that we can establish and ensure a just set of principles and rules for shaping mobility in ways that promote human flourishing by extending some of the legal and regulatory framework around net neutrality to mobility providers.
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