Skip to content
Theme : privacy
-
Tories push for more surveillance
Tories push for more surveillance
from : petebradwell
14th August 2008
-
Finland privacy judgment
Finland privacy judgment
from : petebradwell
24th July 2008
-
Open Rights Group Newsblog : Blog Archive ? Managers prepared to exploit customers? private data
Open Rights Group Newsblog : Blog Archive � Managers prepared to exploit customers? private data
from : petebradwell
25th June 2008
-
Digital Sharing and Privacy
John Tuck of the British library praises the Demos 'UK Confidential' pamphlet as part of the library's Digital Lives research project.
from : mollywebb
10th June 2008
-
Generation excess
The thinktank Demos this week launched UK Confidential, a collection of essays about privacy. It's beyond huge, this issue - it spans every technological advance that's ever happened, every element of government, every cultural trend: so many things make incursions into our individual privacies that I favour a "sod it, it's over" approach - although if there's one thing on which this collection is quite firm, it's that fatalism doesn't help.
from : charlieedwards
21st May 2008
-
Our surveillance society goes online | Technology | The Guardian
Excellent article on a new book looking at the implications of automated data reading and analysis.
from : petebradwell
9th May 2008
-
apophenia: how youth find privacy in interstitial spaces
danah boyd post on young people and privacy
from : petebradwell
11th March 2008
-
The Future of Reputation
A book, available free online, on what might be happening to our privacy and ultimately reputation in an age of ubiquitous personal information.
from : petebradwell
25th February 2008
-
Archrights videos on ContactPoint database
Archrights videos on ContactPoint database
from : petebradwell
23rd January 2008
-
'Consult on ID cards or scrap plan'
Research by the think-tank Demos warns that people are losing control of their personal data and calls on the Government to act to ensure greater protection.
Its report, which is based on nine months of research, also calls for Labour's ID cards policy to be scrapped unless the public are properly consulted.
And the think-tank suggests banks could have an insurance-type "no-claims" bonus for people who successfully protect their own identity from fraudsters.
from : charlieedwards
7th December 2007