archive

Rethinking privacy

Andrew McStay (Bangor): Privacy and Philosophy: New Media And Affective Protocol. Neil M. Richards and Joanna F. Cornwell (WUSTL): Privacy and Intellectual Freedom. Robert Lee Bolton (Pierpont): The Right to Be Forgotten: Forced Amnesia in a Technological Age. Joel R. Reidenberg (Fordham): Privacy in Public. Neil M. Richards and Jonathan H. King (WUSTL): Big Data and the Future for Privacy. Gordon Hull (UNC): Successful Failure: What Foucault Can Teach Us About Privacy Self-Management in a World of Facebook and Big Data. Martin Hirst on how “big data” is creating a surveillance economy. William H. Simon on rethinking privacy: The paranoid political style has been associated with the right — Foucault brought it to liberals. Lisa M. Austin (Toronto): Enough About Me: Why Privacy is About Power, Not Consent (or Harm). Claire Cain Miller on how Americans say they want privacy, but act as if they don’t. Facebook generation rekindles expectation of privacy online. Radical Librarianship: Alison Macrina and April Glaser on how ninja librarians are ensuring patrons' electronic privacy. If the Supreme Court tackles the NSA in 2015, it’ll be one of these five cases: Cyrus Farivar on how a church, terror suspects, and some lawyers are pushing privacy on the legal front. Privacy policies rarely mention the weakest point in any company’s security infrastructure: its employees. Cory Doctorow on how privacy technology everyone can use would make us all more secure.