%0 Journal Article %T Digital Colonialism and the Fourth Industrial Revolution - Preventing Exploitative Bio-economies. %A Marshall A %A Marshall A %A Marshall A %J J Law Med %V 29 %N 3 %D Aug 2022 %M 36056670 暂无%X As the traditional use of non-human genetic resources in research and development is increasingly ceded to computerised research activities, current frameworks for access and benefit-sharing face an impending identity crisis. The absence of international consensus on the regulation of digital sequence information presents a critical point of social division between the Global North and Global South, whereby a culture of "open data" promises immeasurable opportunity in high-income nations and threatens a wave of digital bio-piracy for vulnerable communities. This article critically evaluates these problems and considers solutions which draw on Indigenous Data Sovereignty principles. To do so, it uses the recent experience in Queensland to explore how the law might reconcile and balance these competing interests. Insofar as Queensland is one of the most mega biodiverse regions on earth, boasts a globally competitive life sciences sector, and has a vibrant and longstanding Indigenous population, it offers a unique case study.