This document discusses privacy topics related to computer technology. It covers threats to privacy from intentional and unintentional data collection and sharing, as well as new risks from databases, data analysis tools, and surveillance capabilities. Key privacy principles are outlined, such as only collecting needed data, keeping it accurate and secure, and allowing people to opt out of secondary data uses and advertising. The reading also examines issues like consumer profiling, location tracking, data theft, oversharing of personal information, and balancing public access to records with privacy.
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Chapter 2
This document discusses privacy topics related to computer technology. It covers threats to privacy from intentional and unintentional data collection and sharing, as well as new risks from databases, data analysis tools, and surveillance capabilities. Key privacy principles are outlined, such as only collecting needed data, keeping it accurate and secure, and allowing people to opt out of secondary data uses and advertising. The reading also examines issues like consumer profiling, location tracking, data theft, oversharing of personal information, and balancing public access to records with privacy.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A Gift of Fire
Third edition
Sara Baase
Chapter 2: Privacy
Slides prepared by Cyndi Chie and Sarah Frye
What We Will Cover • Privacy and Computer Technology • “Big Brother is Watching You” • Privacy Topics • Protecting Privacy Privacy Key Aspects of Privacy: • Freedom from intrusion (being left alone) • Control of information about oneself • Freedom from surveillance (being tracked, followed, watched) Privacy threats • Privacy threats come in several category • Intentional, institutional uses of personal information (in the government sector primarily for law enforcement and tax collection, and in the private sector primarily for marketing and decision making) Continue • Unauthorized use or release by insiders, the people who maintain the information • Theft of information • Inadvertent leakage of information through negligence or carelessness • Our own actions (sometimes intentional trade-offs and sometimes when we are unaware of the risks) Quote • It’s important to realize that privacy preserves not personal secrets, but a sense of safety within a circle of friends so that the individual can be more candid, more expressive, more open with “secrets.” • Robert Ellis Smith Privacy and Computer Technology (cont.) New Technology, New Risks: • Government and private databases • Sophisticated tools for surveillance and data analysis • Vulnerability of data Privacy and Computer Technology (cont.) Terminology: • Invisible information gathering - collection of personal information about someone without the person’s knowledge • Secondary use - use of personal information for a purpose other than the one it was provided for Privacy and Computer Technology (cont.) Terminology (cont.): • Data mining - searching and analyzing masses of data to find patterns and develop new information or knowledge • Computer matching - combining and comparing information from different databases (using social security number, for example, to match records) Privacy and Computer Technology (cont.) Terminology (cont.): • Computer profiling - analyzing data in computer files to determine characteristics of people most likely to engage in certain behavior Privacy and Computer Technology (cont.) Privacy advocates have developed various sets of principles for protection of personal data. •Informed consent •Opt-in and opt-out policies •Fair Information Principles (or Practices) •Data retention Privacy Principles for Personal information 1. Inform people when you collect information about them, what you collect, and how you use it. 2. Collect only the data needed. 3. Offer a way for people to opt out from mailing lists, advertising, and other secondary uses. Offer a way for people to opt out from features and services that expose personal information. 4. Keep data only as long as needed. 5. Maintain accuracy of data. Where appropriate and reasonable, provide a way for people to access and correct data stored about them. 6. Protect security of data (from theft and from accidental leaks). Provide stronger protection for sensitive data. 7. Develop policies for responding to law enforcement requests for data. Privacy and Computer Technology Discussion Questions • Have you seen opt-in and opt-out choices? • What are some common elements of privacy policies you have read? "Big Brother is Watching You" • In George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984, Big Brother (the government) could watch everyone via telescreen in all homes and public places. There was little crime and little political dissent -and no love and no freedom-. • But not today why? • England has a similar tradition, as expressed in William Pitt’s colorful statement in 1763: • “The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the force of the Crown. It may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow through it; the storms may enter; the rain may enter-but the King of England cannot enter....” "Big Brother is Watching You" (cont.) Discussion Questions • What data does the government have about you? • Who has access to the data? • How is your data protected? Diverse Privacy Topics Marketing, Personalization and Consumer Dossiers: • Targeted marketing – Data mining – Paying for consumer information – Data firms and consumer profiles • Credit records Diverse Privacy Topics (cont.) Location Tracking: • Global Positioning Systems (GPS) -computer or communication services that know exactly where a person is at a particular time • Cell phones and other devices are used for location tracking • Pros and cons Diverse Privacy Topics (cont.) Stolen and Lost Data: • Hackers • Physical theft (laptops, thumb-drives, etc.) • Requesting information under false pretenses • Bribery of employees who have access Diverse Privacy Topics (cont.) What We Do Ourselves: • Personal information in blogs and online profiles • Pictures of ourselves and our families • File sharing and storing • Is privacy old-fashioned? – Young people put less value on privacy than previous generations – May not understand the risks Diverse Privacy Topics (cont.) Public Records: Access vs. Privacy: • Public Records - records available to general public (bankruptcy, property, and arrest records, salaries of government employees, etc.) • Identity theft can arise when public records are accessed • How should we control access to sensitive public records? Diverse Privacy Topics (cont.) Children: • The Internet – Not able to make decisions on when to provide information – Vulnerable to online predators • Parental monitoring – Software to monitor Web usage – Web cams to monitor children while parents are at work – GPS tracking via cell phones Protecting Privacy Technology and Markets: • Privacy enhancing-technologies for consumers • Encryption – Public-key cryptography • Business tools and policies for protecting data