Category: Privacy
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By Gordon Hull Consider the following, too brief summary: following Foucault, one can say that biopolitics is about optimizing populations, or something to that effect. This involves a lot of work on the part of the administrative state, which sets itself up to provide services, everything from sewers and other infrastructure to social safety nets. …
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In the shameless self-promotion dept., I have a new paper out – actually a review essay in Ethics & International Affairs (SSRN link here) of two recent books on privacy, Ari Ezra Waldman's Privacy as Trust and Jennifer Rothman's Right of Publicity. Both books are well-worth the read! The essay also pushes my thesis about…
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By Gordon Hull Last time, I offered some thoughts on Woody Hartzog’s (and co-authors’) development of “obscurity” as a partial replacement for privacy. On Hartzog’s account, privacy is subject to a number of problems, not least of which is that we tend to think in terms of an unsustainable binary: things are either “private” or…
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By Gordon Hull In a series of articles (and a NYT op-ed; my $.02 on that is here), Woddy Hartzog and several co-authors have been developing the concept of “obscurity” as a partial replacement for “privacy.” The gist of the argument, as explained by Hartzog and Evan Selinger in a recent anthology piece (“Obscurity and…
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By Gordon Hull A couple of weeks ago, I noted my newly discovered appreciation for Philip Agre’s “Surveillance and Capture” and outlined why I think his development of capture (and retreat from surveillance) is particularly applicable to the privacy concerns surrounding big data. Here, I’d like to suggest that Agre’s distinction is also helpful in…
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By Gordon Hull A current paper by Mireille Hildebrandt sent me to a paper from 1994 that I’m embarrassed to say I hadn’t read before: Philip Agre’s “Surveillance and Capture.” Agre’s paper has been cited over 300 times, but it’s missing in a lot of the privacy literature I know. After reading it, I’ve decided…
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By Gordon Hull In the New York Times last week, Woodrow Hartzog and Evan Selinger underscore the importance of obscurity to privacy. They begin with an easy example: most of us do not remember the faces or names of those who stood in line with us the last time we purchased medicine at the drug…
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By Gordon Hull In what seems like a distant, more innocent time in surveillance (viz. 2003), Andy Clark was able to use as an example in his Natural Born Cyborgs an implanted tracking chip for pets. Does your cat tend to wander off? Now you can know where Whiskers is at all times! (no doubt…
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By Gordon Hull Santa Claus knows when you’ve been sleeping, knows when you’re awake, and knows if you’ve been bad or good. Your phone knows all of that too, because it knows exactly where you are. It then sends all that information to your carrier, which keeps it in its logs for five years. Stay…
