Text
THE PRIVATE IS POLITICAL NETWORKED PRIVACY AND SOCIAL MEDIA
Th e term “network†can mean all sorts of things, but I use it here to_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> describe three levels of connections, all insecure. Th ere are the social connec-_x000D_<br /> tions made explicit by social technologies; the behavioral networks mapped_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> and traced through consumer-level tracking and aggregation of big data; and_x000D_<br /> perhaps most powerful and invisible, the deeply rooted and interconnected_x000D_<br /> networks of surveillance by which the state controls its citizens through_x000D_<br /> education, employment, social services, and criminal justice. As Ravi says,_x000D_<br /> the agency to control the fl ow of information—to determine who receives_x000D_<br /> it and in what context—is necessary to personal privacy, but when privacy_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> is networked, this ability is always compromised. Networked privacy is en-_x000D_<br /> abled not only by social platforms and the actors behind them but by the_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> very act of digitization. Digitization transforms ephemeral information like_x000D_<br /> who your friends are or what you buy into something visible, traceable, and_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> measurable. Networked privacy is a new framework for understanding pri-_x000D_<br /> vacy in a world saturated with social media, state and corporate surveillance,_x000D_<br /> _x000D_<br /> and big data technologies.
Tidak ada salinan data
Tidak tersedia versi lain