Privacy
News Commentary: The Beginning of the End for Privacy
0On some days I offer comments on some of the most interesting information technology stories that I have found on the web that week. Please feel free to join in the discussion or suggest other stories.
Frankly, this scared me. As I read it, I kept on thinking about Machiavelli’s The Prince and its paraphrased theme that “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Here is a story from the Telegraph reporting on the founder of Facebook and his thoughts on how privacy is no longer required. Give it a read:
The Telegraph – Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg says privacy is no longer a ‘social norm’
Talking in San Francisco over the weekend at the Crunchie Awards, which recognise technological achievements, the 25 year-old web entrepreneur said: “People have really gotten comfortable not only sharing more information and different kinds, but more openly and with more people.”
He went on to say that privacy was no longer a ‘social norm’ and had just evolved over time.
Hmmm… this is scary stuff. What is worse is that it is being said by the person most responsible for protecting the expectation of privacy online. If they fold so goes the rest of the online world by convention. I suppose that this was inevitable, but it is still disappointing and profit driven. As an Information Professional, I know that with the resources available to Zuckerberg, he could easily provide data set based security and privacy controls on every discrete piece of information on Facebook. He could also provide a user interface that made it easy for people to customize from no to full protection and even has the lawyers to design an end user agreement to protect him. Why in the world would he go down this path?
I am frightened….
What do you think about this topic? Do you agree or disagree with me? Do you have a recommended news story for next week? Please share your ideas below.
That is my Information Technology Thought of the Day (ITTOD) for January 12, 2010 by Scott Coughlin.
Image Credit: Those who came in late…
News Commentary: The Digital Neighborhood Inversion
0On Sundays I offer comments on some of the most interesting information technology stories that I have found on the web that week. Please feel free to join in the discussion or suggest stories during the week.
This week’s story is from Associated Newspapers Ltd in the UK and it discusses a very unique, Information Age trend that I recognize all around me. We are all starting to know more about our distant friends via Twitter, Facebook, and Email, than we know about our local neighbors. I think that the author of this commentary did a wonderful job of putting the problem into words. I recommend that you give it a good read. Check it out here:
Associated Newspapers Ltd – I’ve got 668 ‘friends’ on Facebook… but I don’t know any of my neighbors
As I sit down with a cup of coffee to check my emails, my gaze shifts out of the window, where I notice a bald chap wheezing over a wheelbarrow two gardens away. I think he’s my neighbour - but I’m not sure.
I am 33 and have lived in my house for nearly three years. Until a few months ago I was convinced my next-door neighbour, James, was, in fact, called Daniel…
The sad truth is, I know more about the 668 ‘friends’ I have on Facebook than I do my own neighbours. I know that a girl I was with in sixth-form has a baby boy. I’ve seen the pictures. And I’ve caught a glimpse of the inside of her house. It’s very nice.
I find myself in this same situation, too. I move a lot for work… eleven times in 20 years… and it definitely seems like it is getting harder and harder to meet the local neighbors. The fault is certainly 90% mine, but I also don’t really feel like I am alone. There just does not seem to be the same social customs involved with new people moving into the area that there once was. I guess that if you define our community to the Internet, then we are all just digital migrants and therefore we may never actually be home… or move at all.
What do you think about this topic? Do you agree or disagree with me? Do you have a recommended news story for next week? Please share your ideas below.
That is my Information Technology Thought of the Day (ITTOD) for December 13, 2009 by Scott Coughlin.
Image Credit: faqs.org
News Commentary: Is There Any Truth in the Google Hacking Story?
0On Sundays I offer comments on some of the most interesting information technology stories that I have found on the web that week. Please feel free to join in the discussion or suggest other stories.
Wow, this was a tough week to be an Information Technology Professional and not get frustrated with the news coverage of the case of the Google Hackers. Our industry and profession are hard enough to explain to laymen without every major news organization in the world pulling out their experts and telling them to dumb down their commentary until they are essentially nonsensical. Seriously, I have not read a single news story on Google’s self-proclaimed hacking that made sense, added value to the Google press release, or did justice to the complexity of the problem. Take a look at the following two stories from CNN.com and tell me that they don’t over simplify the issue to boredom.
CNN.com – U.S. enables Chinese hacking of Google By Bruce Schneier
CNN.com – Clinton: Internet ‘information curtain’ is dropping
Don’t get me wrong… I appreciate the severity of this issue. I consider it a responsibility of a government to protect the property of its citizens and companies from attack from foreign governments and entities. What I dislike is that stories like this make it seem overly easy, simplistic, one sided, and transparent. Cyberspace is simply too new of a domain for rules, laws, and expectations to be set. Honestly, my heart goes out to the victims of the Haiti Earthquake, but as far as I can tell that was the story that booted this frustrating discussion to the back page and probably into oblivion as far as mainstream media is concerned,
We do need international treaties and laws that govern The Information Domain. Cyber Space will not self regulate. What we cannot do, however, is try to apply old thinking, geographic-based constraints, and over simplification to the challenges that are ahead of us.
What do you think about this topic? Do you agree or disagree with me? Do you have a recommended news story for next week? Please share your ideas below.
That is my Information Technology Thought of the Day (ITTOD) for January 17, 2010 by Scott Coughlin.
Image Credit: The U.S. Department of Justice