Peter Bradwell
Researcher
Peter Bradwell is a researcher at Demos. He is interested in digital identity, technology and the ways that information and knowledge is shared...
-
QDOS
The FYI pamphlet was big on the need for ideas that can help people manage their personal information - and the trail of information we leave behind us that is often called our 'digital footprint'. That tells other people a lot about the kind of things a person likes and, ultimately, the sort of person they are.
So I thought it was worth mentioning Garlik's new tool 'QDOS', which looks like a really interesting and accessible way to start thinking about, and managing, that digital footprint... continue reading on 13th December 2007 in For Your Information -
FYI
Last Friday, 7th December, we launched FYI: the new politics of personal information, a pamphlet about how and why personal information has become so valuable and important.
Whilst there are many benefits to sharing our personal details, the current debate and attitude has seen us lose control over what other people know and think about us. People need to have more of a stake in influencing the rules that determine how and where their information is used. continue reading on 12th December 2007 in For Your Information -
The new politics of personal information
We've been telling anyone that will listen for a long time that personal information is really important. In the past couple of days it seems like we, and people like the Information Commissioner, have been proved right. The story details some terrible mistakes, but we can't stop with the bad news story. This is an opportunity to open the serious debate we need about how and why personal information is so valuable.
That's a debate we're calling for in the forthcoming pamphlet FYI: The new politics of personal information, which we're launching on 7th December. continue reading on 22nd November 2007 in For Your Information - Crossing the 'e's Yesterday the Prime Minister announced various anti-terrorism measures, including updates on the 'e-borders' program. There's a comment, about the speech and approach generally, from Timothy Garton-Ash here. I thought it was worth mentioning the e-borders news, especially in the light of our upcoming pamphlet on personal information. continue reading on 15th November 2007 in For Your Information Comments (1)
- The type of information people have matters Big 'Big Brother' headline today, on the front of the Daily Mail. A written answer to a question from the Liberal Democrats shows the number of DNA profiles on the National DNA Database (NDNA), as of 25 October, to be about 4.5 million profiles. I can't find the full written answer online yet, but here's some more coverage of it. Some are duplicates - but the proportion of the population on there seems to be about 6-7%.This isn't really news. The Home Office website proudly boasts that it is... continue reading on 5th November 2007 in For Your Information Comments (1)
- The structured web I just read a really useful post from the Read/WriteWeb blog about where the internet is heading. It summed up really well some of the significant trends: "Among the evolving aspects of the new web are Semantics, Attention (Implicit Behavior) and Personalization. Regardless of what we are decide to call this next web, the information in it is going to be more meaningful, more automatic, and more tailored to each of us... continue reading on 11th October 2007 in For Your Information Comments (1)
- The hair and the home office Being pretty geeky, it pleases me when stories that you might assume are a bit tecchie make headline news. So I was delighted to see the BBC all over a story about identity theft, based on an impending report from the All-party Group on Identity Fraud. Unsurprisingly, and understandably, it has made the news because it is about some potentially serious threats stemming from some very popular behaviour and activities - specifically social networking... continue reading on 6th October 2007 in For Your Information
- Hearing difficulties The front page of the Mail on Sunday was rather enjoyable today, expressing as it did tangible outrage at the powers of the amended Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000. The story is a great example of how frustrating online newspaper copy can be; but trying to understand the changes it is referring to give a broader sense of how difficult it can be to unravel legislative changes and their impact. The whole process, from inception to commentary, can be pretty opaque.The newspaperFirst... continue reading on 30th September 2007 in For Your Information
- Speaking blogs to power It seemed worth highlighting the unfortunate blogging saga involving billionaire and Arsenal shareholder Alisher Usmanov (here's his wikipedia entry - it should be interesting to see how this develops).Earlier this month Craig Murray, former ambassador to Uzbekistan, posted a strongly worded, um, 'critique' of Usmanov containing a number of allegations regarding his conduct during his rise up the ranks of rich post-communists. Usmanov denies them and via law firm Schillings forced the post to be removed... continue reading on 26th September 2007 Comments (1)
- Global privacy standards? Data and information about us, for reasons fair, foul or just opaque, travels across nations and continents as an almost necessary by-product of whatever it is that we call the information society. But how can we be sure about what that means for who sees that personal information, and how it is used?Google's Peter Fleischer is talking about this today in a speech at a UNESCO conference on ethics and human rights in the information society. He's arguing that we should develop some global... continue reading on 14th September 2007 in Private Lives? Comments (1)
