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Questions to Consider in the Coming Privacy Wars
(via - ReadWriteWeb )
I read it on 01/03/08 at 08:02 AM
Posted on 01/03/08 at 12:09 AM

It seems obvious that privacy is going to be a major point of contention in the near-term future. It's only going to get hotter as major online services compile huge amounts of data about us, as Open Data advocates push for that data to be freed up for reuse and as more cluster[fudge] incidents like the Facebook Beacon and the AOL search data release hit the public consciousness.

The story in the news this week is about Sears getting caught installing ComScore tracking spyware surreptitiously on customer's computers. Who knows what it will be next week? Who knows what lurks in the shadows, set to make the news in the coming year or not at all?

I want it all, personally - I want my data to be free, I want to be in control of it and I want to have control over my privacy as well. Is that too much to ask? The watchdog group Privacy International released their annual report today about privacy around the world and put the US in the lowest category - "endemic surveillance societies." Can we figure out how we can minimize surveillance while balancing privacy and the incredible opportunities that come from making at least some of our data open?

Beyond that big question, there are a lot of "little questions" that we need to engage with as soon as possible so that we don't lose out on privacy or Open Data, one at the expense of the other.

Here's my list of important questions, what's on yours?

1. What of contemporary privacy standards should be carried through into an era of data and what ought not?

Contemporary legal standards are feeling the strain of an emerging era of data; should family be able to access a deceased person's social networking accounts, for example? (And who constitutes family, by the way?) There are many different frameworks for privacy that could be drawn on - are direct messages on Twitter between you and Clergy or your Doctor legally protected as Privileged Communication? Presumably so. What about credit card data - is that a privacy framework that we might or might not want to use as a model for privacy policies regarding our browser history, saved items and contact lists? Probably not.

Some contemporary privacy frameworks may be woefully inadequate for the fast approaching future, some may continue to serve us well and some widely accepted ideas about privacy may receive long-overdue reconsideration in the face of changing communication.


2. How do we balance the benefits of data openness with the need for privacy?

Leveraged Attention Data, data mining, "anonymized" aggregate behavioral analysis - new useful forms of access to data take shape quickly in a technology landscape undergoing rapid evolution. Some people look at any of it and freak out.

Surely there's some standards and best practices that can be determined in order to maximize the good from both open data and privacy. The costs are too high in both directions to lose out on either for the other.

3. Are users savvy or motivated enough to control our own data?

Or do decisions need to be made, benevolently, for us by either standards and/or market forces? When should data collection be opt-in and when can it be opt-out? Are vendor interests served better or worse by pushing users into giving up more control over data than we might want to?

These questions invoke psychology, sociology, philosophy and economics. It's not just Computer Scientists, marketers and PR pros who will have jobs in the future!

4. Is the desire for privacy a conservative force that will hamper innovation based on openness?

Hopefully not. If we must choose, which should we choose? I asked my friends on Twitter (of all places) who would go on record saying that "privacy is an illusion" and 15 people said they agreed with that statement within 15 minutes. Chris Messina posted links to three posts he's written on the topic. Personally, I contend that the most important level of privacy will be safe until the implant comes.

5. Will a lower threshold of privacy than is good for us become a competitive necessity?

"What do you mean you haven't turned on the GPS tracking in your child's mobile? How will she write the report on her daily travels that's assigned to her at school?"

A common ethical dilemma discussed concerning things like human genetic engineering or performance enhancing measures is the risk that such actions may set a new standard that becomes required for meaningful participation in society - whether it's a good idea or not.

When Social Security numbers were assigned in the US they were explicitly not intended for identification purposes. That's now a joke, you practically have to give out your social security number and identity theft runs rampant.

Our collective decisions have the potential to create effective coercion in the lives of individuals, making the opt-out a decision that leads to social isolation and greater survival challenges than are fair.

6. Is data centralization in the hands of a single vendor an inherent threat to privacy?

Hello, Google. Hello Google Search, Maps, Sky, Streetview, GMail, Docs, 23andMe genetics, Talk, Goog411, Google Scholar... surely I'm still missing a lot of the data that Google has collected about us.

Is data centralization in the hands of a single vendor an inherent threat to privacy? Yes. To draw an analogy, trusting the "Do No Evil" line is like saying you'd support a President that you like changing the constitution to allow warrantless wiretapping. Centralization of power, even if it's exercised benevolently at any given time, is not in our best interest in the long term. In fact, I'd argue that it's highly irrational.

How does this relate to open standards of data, though? Does information need to be centralized if anyone with enough resources can access it all from anywhere?

What are we going to do about it?

7. What is the balance between digital privacy and national or international security?

Speaking of Administrations you do or do not agree with, what question could be more timely to ask than this one? Around the world it's Google and Yahoo! who are forced to wrestle with this question now, here in the US it's ATT and the public library - in the future it will be everyone.

Conclusions

The coming privacy wars are going to be high stakes and heated. I'm sure there are other big questions that I haven't thought of, but I think that at least these 7 issues are ones that we would be well served engaging with sooner rather than later. Here's one response to the questions above - what do you think? Let's crank up our talking about these issues online, I'm guessing that many of us talked about them a lot over the holidays with friends and family.




Tags: privacy  data  questions  standards  open  
 
 

Striking Daily Show writers turn on corporate parents [Clips]
(via - Valleywag )
I read it on 11/16/07 at 02:50 PM
Posted on 11/16/07 at 07:48 PM


When Viacom sued Google for $1 billion, it put a pretty big price tag on the value of distributing its content over the Internet. Now Viacom and other studios refuse to negotiate with their writers over how much they should be compensated when content hits the Web. Why? Because it's too early to tell how much its worth. Just like they do with politicians every night, The Daily Show's writers sniffed out the inconsistencies and put together this clip. Oh, that man holding the sign with a strategically placed finger? We hear it's former Business 2.0 editor Tim Carvell, one of the originators of the deceased magazine's "101 Dumbest Moments" franchise.





Tags: writers  viacom  content  daily  strategically  


 
 

Social networks then and now
(via - Jon Udell )
I read it on 08/28/07 at 02:06 PM
Posted on 08/28/07 at 06:57 PM

On a recent vacation during which I helped a friend who's building a house on Prince Edward Island, I picked up a copy of The Guardian and happened upon the death and funeral announcements. At first glance what's remarkable is the amount of detail about the family of the deceased, the entire cast of [...]


Tags: first  glance  funeral  death  guardian  
 
 

Deceased Malayan hit with $218 trillion mobile bill (Burke Hansen/The Register)
(via - Techmeme )
I read it on 08/12/07 at 01:12 PM
Posted on 08/12/07 at 02:00 PM

Deceased Malayan hit with $218 trillion mobile bill Roaming in the valley of the shadow of death What otherworldly ectoplasms lurk in the oblivion of such an unholy place as accounts receivable? A Malaysian man who paid off a $23 wireless bill and disconnected his late father's cell phone

Source: The Register
Author: Burke Hansen
Link: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/08/12

Techmeme permalink




Tags: bill  burke  deceased  register  hansen  
 
 

Blogging For Dollars: Welcome to the age of the ex-blogger!
(via - Valleywag )
I read it on 08/07/07 at 03:06 PM
Posted on 08/07/07 at 04:22 PM

This is an EX-BLOGGER!
Gartner, the Internet research firm, is making a bold prediction that flies in the face of the contemporary spasm of blog enthusiasm: Blogging will peak this year, according to a summary of the report by Ars Technica. And this stat really caught my eye: There are 200 already million ex-bloggers. Oh, I can think of a lot of names I'd like to see added to those ranks. And I could speculate about what a slowdown in blogging could do to a lot of blog-based businesses in the Bay Area. But I'm just not feeling it. Instead, with apologies to Monty Python, a sketch about an ex-blogger.


Dead Blogger Sketch

The cast:
MR. BLOGLINES
DATACENTER OWNER

The sketch:
A customer enters a datacenter.

Mr. Bloglines: 'Ello, I wish to register a complaint.
(The owner does not respond.)

Mr. Bloglines: 'Ello, Miss?

Owner: What do you mean "miss"?

Mr. Bloglines: I'm sorry, my computer has a virus. I wish to make a complaint!

Owner: We're closin' to restart our generators.

Mr. Bloglines: Never mind that, my lad. I wish to complain about this blogger what I installed in a rack not half an hour ago from this very facility.

Owner: Oh yes, the, uh, the Drupal Fork ... What's, uh ... What's wrong with it?

Mr. Bloglines: I'll tell you what's wrong with it, my lad. 'E's dead, that's what's wrong with it!

Owner: No, no, 'e's uh,...his IM's on idle.

Mr. Bloglines: Look, matey, I know a dead blogger when I see one, and I'm looking at one right now.

Owner: No no he's not dead, he's, he's takin' a break! Remarkable blog, the Drupal Fork, idn'it, ay? Beautiful comments!

Mr. Bloglines: The comments don't enter into it. It's stone dead.

Owner: Nononono, no, no! 'E's idle!

Mr. Bloglines: All right then, if he's idle, I'll wake him up! (shouting at the server cage) 'Ello, Mister Blithering Blogger! I've got a lovely fresh article from Digg for you if you show ...
(owner hits the cage)

Owner: There, he pinged!

Mr. Bloglines: No, he didn't, that was you hitting the cage!

Owner: I never!!

Mr. Bloglines: Yes, you did!

Owner: I never, never did anything...

Mr. Bloglines: (yelling and hitting the cage repeatedly) 'ELLO BLOGGY!!!!! Testing! Testing! Testing! Testing! This is your nine o'clock post call!
(Takes server's removable drives out of the cage and thumps them against the rack. Throws them up in the air and watches them plummet to the floor.)

Mr. Bloglines: Now that's what I call a dead blogger.

Owner: No, no.....No, 'e's crashed!

Mr. Bloglines: CRASHED?!?

Owner: Yeah! You crashed him, just as he was rebootin'! Drupal Forks crash easily, major.

Mr. Bloglines: Um ... now look ... now look, mate, I've definitely 'ad enough of this. That blogger is definitely deceased, and when I installed it not 'alf an hour ago, you assured me that its total lack of posts was due to it bein' tired and shagged out following a prolonged flamewar.

Owner: Well, he's ... he's, ah ... probably pining for Fake Steve.

Mr. Bloglines: PININ' for FAKE STEVE?!?!?!? What kind of talk is that?, look, why did his trackbacks fall flat the moment I got 'im home?

Owner: The Drupal Fork prefers to moderate its trackbacks! Remarkable blog, id'nit, squire? Lovely comments!

Mr. Bloglines: Look, I took the liberty of examining that blogger when I got it home, and I discovered the only reason that it had been posting anything in the
first place was that it had an RSS feed NAILED into it.
(pause)

Owner: Well, o'course it was nailed into it! If I hadn't nailed that feed in, it would have nuzzled up to Fark and Digg, violated their terms of service left and right, and VOOM! Feeweeweewee!

Mr. Bloglines: "VOOM"?!? Mate, this blog wouldn't "voom" if you put four million visitors through it! 'E's bleedin' demised!

Owner: No no! 'E's pining!

Mr. Bloglines: 'E's not pinin'! 'E's passed on! This blogger is no more! He has ceased to be! 'E's expired and gone to meet 'is maker! 'E's a stiff! Bereft of life, 'e rests in peace! If you hadn't nailed 'im to his feed, 'e'd be pushing up the daisies! 'Is metaphoric processes are now 'istory! 'E's off the grid! 'E's kicked the bucket, 'e's shuffled off 'is mortal coil, run down the curtain and joined the bleedin' choir invisibile!! THIS IS AN EX-BLOGGER!! (pause)

Owner: Well, I'd better replace it, then. (he takes a quick peek behind the counter) Sorry squire, I've had a look 'round the back of the colo, and uh,
we're right out of bloggers.

Mr. Bloglines: I see. I see, I get the picture.

Owner: I got a MySpace page.
(pause)

Mr. Bloglines: Pray, does it talk?

Owner: Nnnnot really. It does play this terrible song, though.

Mr. Bloglines: WELL IT'S HARDLY A BLOODY REPLACEMENT, IS IT?!!???!!?

Owner: N-no, I guess not. (gets ashamed, looks at his feet)

Mr. Bloglines: Well. (pause)

Owner: (quietly) D'you.... d'you want to be my Facebook friend?

Mr. Bloglines: (looks around) Yeah, all right, sure.




Tags: bloglines  owner  e  blogger  dead  
 
 
 



 
 
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