Felix Stalder on Thu, 26 Mar 2020 16:09:28 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Il Manifesto: Let's get the network data |
I think trust should not be placed primarily in technological solutions, an app where we can fine-tune our privacy preferences. Rather, the focus should be on creating social institutions that are capable of analyzing these system-wide dynamics, based on all this data, and then develop policies within a democratic framework. I know, lots of people will argue -- as liberal theory has for the last 200 years -- that personal privacy is a precondition for democracy, but that Gutenberg Galaxy argument is really limiting our thinking. Let's face it, that system-level, deeply privacy-invasive, knowledge exists already, but since it's housed in closed institutions (profit and/or security-focused) nobdoy on the outside (scientists, public, democratic decision-making bodies) has no access to it. For about 15 years, we could observe the consequences of this, and it's a vast accumulation of wealth and power in the hand of an unaccountable few, at expense of public institutions left to play catch-up they cannot win. That leaves us with either issuing soft appeals, or accepting unaccountable backroom deals, like the one that the Trump-administration may, or may not, preparing with Google and Palantier. The latter is really a worst-case scenario. I think we should think in a different direction. How about mandating that big data companies make their data available for public-interest research? What public-interest research is in practice, and how to handle the inevitable privacy issues, could be left to decide to a science review board. There is lots of experience with that. Wouldn't that open a much more interesting discussion? All the best. Felix On 26.03.20 15:07, Andreas Broeckmann wrote: > folks, it's probably no surprise that we are getting, only this morning, > two reposts that advocate a more aggressive employment of data-driven > measures, both implying that data privacy may have to be curtailed in > the service of public health. (i've excerpted the crucial passages from > both messages below.) > > in germany, the minister for health yesterday had to withdraw a law > proposal that would have gone in this direction, in the face of strong > protests, incl. from the ministry of justice. > > i wonder what the options for technical solutions might be that could be > more acceptable for people concerned about data protection and civil > rights. (to me, the italian appeal to the benevolence of the GAFA seems > all too naive, though understandable in the desperate situation in > italy.) would it perhaps even be possible to think forward, to consider > improvements to the technical systems that would give smartphone users > (are we talking about anybody else?) a greater level of control about > their data profiles, at least in the long run? or other real advantages? > > just speculating... > > -a > > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: