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La difference' is stark in EU, U.S. privacy laws - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 06 Jul 11 no follow-up yet

GOOGLE PRIVACY CHANGES - 0 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 12 Mar 12 no follow-up yet

ITIF to Privacy Chicken Little's: "The Sky Is Not Falling" - 0 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 12 Oct 11 no follow-up yet

12 Education Tech Trends to Watch in 2012 - 2 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 05 Jan 12 no follow-up yet

Phone Hacking, Regulation of Social Networking Services - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 09 Aug 11 no follow-up yet
1More

How Google Dominates Us by James Gleick | The New York Review of Books - 0 views

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    How Google Dominates Us August 18, 2011 James Gleick "This much is clear: We need to decide what we want from Google. If only we can make up our collective minds. Then we still might not get it. The company always says users can "opt out" of many of its forms of data collection, which is true, up to a point, for savvy computer users; and the company speaks of privacy in terms of "trade-offs," to which Vaidhyanathan objects: Privacy is not something that can be counted, divided, or "traded." It is not a substance or collection of data points. It's just a word that we clumsily use to stand in for a wide array of values and practices that influence how we manage our reputations in various contexts. There is no formula for assessing it: I can't give Google three of my privacy points in exchange for 10 percent better service. This seems right to me, if we add that privacy involves not just managing our reputation but protecting the inner life we may not want to share. In any case, we continue to make precisely the kinds of trades that Vaidhyanathan says are impossible. Do we want to be addressed as individuals or as neurons in the world brain? We get better search results and we see more appropriate advertising when we let Google know who we are. And we save a few keystrokes."
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Harvard's Privacy Meltdown - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views

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    "By Marc Parry July 10, 2011 In 2006, Harvard sociologists struck a mother lode of social-science data, offering a new way to answer big questions about how race and cultural tastes affect relationships. The source: some 1,700 Facebook profiles, downloaded from an entire class of students at an "anonymous" university, that could reveal how friendships and interests evolve over time. It was the kind of collection that hundreds of scholars would find interesting. And in 2008, the Harvard team began to realize that potential by publicly releasing part of its archive. But today the data-sharing venture has collapsed. The Facebook archive is more like plutonium than gold-its contents yanked offline, its future release uncertain, its creators scolded by some scholars for downloading the profiles without students' knowledge and for failing to protect their privacy. Those students have been identified as Harvard College's Class of 2009."

The Hill Technology IssueWatch Newsletter‏ - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 04 Nov 11 no follow-up yet

SOPA & citizenship in a digital age - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 20 Jan 12 no follow-up yet

The United Nation's Take on Digital Citizenship - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 27 Mar 12 no follow-up yet

New framework for an open Internet agreed at OECD - 1 views

started by Bonnie Sutton on 30 Jun 11 no follow-up yet
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