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INTERNET PRIVACY - Coggle Diagram
INTERNET PRIVACY
What is privacy? What does it mean for the government to invade privacy?
Government knowing the online data of a person is the same thing is not being able to control facts about one's life.
Violation of the fourth amendment
Reveals embarrassing facts or images
Every information about a person\'s record is revealed to the government
Schauer, Frederick. âINTERNET PRIVACY AND THE PUBLIC-PRIVATE DISTINCTION.â Jurimetrics, vol. 38, no. 4, 1998, pp. 555â564. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/29762570. Accessed 24 Aug. 2020.
To be able to control control facts about one's life
Danger to the privacy and information of the person using the technology.
The licensing of our personal information; Is it the solution to our internet privacy??
"They" watch you every time you view their site.
ISP, marketers and businesses
3 reason why privacy fails to protect internet privacy
They do not provide uniform system to protect personal information privacy
They cannot balance out consumer and business exchange of usage of personal data
They're not international in scope
Benefit of licensing privacy
Notification
Verification
Choice
Compensation
Ease of use
Enforcement and redress
Basho, Kalinda. âThe Licensing of Our Personal Information: Is It a Solution to Internet Privacy?â California Law Review, vol. 88, no. 5, 2000, pp. 1507â1545. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/3481264. Accessed 26 Aug. 2020.
âSurveillance Technologies and Economies.â Security and Privacy: Global Standards for Ethical Identity Management in Contemporary Liberal Democratic States, by John Kleinig et al., ANU Press, 2011, pp. 129â150. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt24h8h5.12. Accessed 26 Aug. 2020.
Technologies allows websites to use data to group billions of information into categories.
People used to forget about information and data of individual person but in today era, information are not easily forgotten anymore, it is almost store forever until the server are destroyed.
Cross international borders
Being "forced' in a way to provide personal information in order to sign up for an account.
Give a person personal information more than just name and network.
Privacy settings are always on default, meaning most user does not control their privacy setting without knowing it existed in the first place.
Data collection issues
Takes place without predefined purpose
Once it is collected it is persist in variety of locations of devices and data are collected simultaneously that make it hard for having a proper privacy with each device having its different settings
Data are collected without indications
The person of the data being collected are a target of target advertising
Privacy on the internet. Who owns the information?
Three categories of privacy
Privacy on the person or individual
Freedom of movement and expression, restraint against unlawful searches, prohibition against both physical and non physical harassment. (Discrimination. Defamation, Sexual harassment and obscenity
An individual has rights to have his or her dignity and integrity preserved and protected
Territorial privacy
Physical rights to be left alone or undisturbed
Two type of invasion of privacy
Wrongful or improper way of obtaining information
Obtain by third party or to the public without permission
Rosenbaum, Joseph I. âPRIVACY ON THE INTERNET: WHOSE INFORMATION IS IT ANYWAY?â Jurimetrics, vol. 38, no. 4, 1998, pp. 565â573. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/29762571. Accessed 25 Aug. 2020.
Why privacy is important for people
Elements of a good privacy policy
Privacy is necessary for development of autonomous self
Rights to privacy should not be absolute
Can lower medication mistake with lesser privacy
Security reasons such as terrorist attck
Enable us to choose who we share our personal intimate information with.
Allows the person to perceive itself as a trustworthy person
Having privacy allows person to change oneself or live in a different persona.
Children who experience privacy learn that that child has some control of his/her life
Bowie, Norman E., and Karim Jamal. âPrivacy Rights on the Internet: Self-Regulation or Government Regulation?â Business Ethics Quarterly, vol. 16, no. 3, 2006, pp. 323â342. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/3857919. Accessed 25 Aug. 2020.