Your privacy pitted against context and reputation based systems

Source: saunderslog.com

In the wake of the AOL search engine data fiasco, there have been a number of writers writing about the amount of data being collected by search engines, and other web sites, and how that data might be used..  Scott Lemon’s Google Knows Who You Really Are decomposes how Google collects the data, and Phil Windley’s Undistinguished Identity and Your Reputation relates that information to reputation.

Most writers are conflating reputation and context, and concluding that privacy is being violated.. It is true that much potentially damaging information is being collected in the form of search engine statistics.  The value of collecting that contextual information is in better targeting services to the user — in increasing the relevance of vendors offerings to those users.  Three questions should be asked:

  • How much information needs be collected, an. ho. long should it be store. in order to achieve the desired result for the customer?
  • What guarantees does the end user have about how the collector of that information will use it?
  • How does the end user opt out of the collection of that data if they deem the collectors privacy policies unacceptable?

As we build iotum we wrestle with these issues all the time. 

  • Our software collects a very personal profile of our customers&rsquo. communications behaviors, necessitating that we have a robust privacy policy.  We’re in the process, right now, of writing our second revision of that policy to address these very issues.  We will never use the contextual data given by you for any purpose except for helping you better manage your communications.
  • You can opt-out of the collection of data by simply choosing not to install the pieces we use to collect those specific pieces of data.
  • Unless there is a need for longer term storage, most dat. is only stored ephemerally.  For instance, we only store calendar information for a few days, but we store the relationship information for as long as it exists in your address book.  Delete a record from your address book, and it also disappears from iotum.

It’s also worth noting that most European countries, and Canada as well, have placed very strict limits on how companies can use their customers private data.. In law, the information collecte. about the user belongs to the user, not the company.  Not so in the US, where privacy legislation is non-existant, and data collected is the property of the company, and not the user.  This issue is as much about companies being responsible with their customers private information as it is about legislators writing guarantees to the citizenry into law. 

Published on August 11th, 2006 under


Last 20 posts tagged "privacy"

How AT&T picked my pocket.

Source: saunderslog.com

My phone rang on the ski hill this morning.  It was AT&T’s collection agency, BCR, calling to harass me again. 
You see, AT&T picked my pocket to the tune of $1170, and then…

Published on March 11th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Deloitte TMT Predictions

Source: saunderslog.com

Live notes from Duncan Stewart’s presentation this morning:
The TMT predictions are a 1 year snapshot.  These are the hot areas for the next 12 months. 
— Internet —
The rising…

Published on January 24th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , ,

Microsoft to join Dataportability.org?

Source: saunderslog.com

Rumors are flying this morning that Microsoft will join DataPortability.org, the working group thinking through data portability issues.  That would be good news, although at this point ther…

Published on January 23rd, 2008 under , , ,

Obasanjo on regional Facebook networks

Source: saunderslog.com

It boggles my mind that someone sat down and coded “Anyone who lives in the same city as me” as a privacy control and didn’t immediately smack themselves on the head for writing something…

Published on January 17th, 2008 under , , ,

Facebook Feature Set to Enlarge

Source: saunderslog.com

Several reports emerged yesterday around three new Facebook features.  Previously promised, it looks as if these will be delivered in the New Year:

Fine grained privacy controls.  Long demanded,…

Published on January 11th, 2008 under , , ,

The Privacy Manifesto caused a ripple

Source: saunderslog.com

Yesterday was a pretty exciting day on the privacy and data portability front.  I didn’t have any inkling of what was coming up next after publishing the Privacy Manifesto on GigaOm,…

Published on January 9th, 2008 under , , , , , , ,

Transitive Privacy Guarantees

Source: saunderslog.com

A call went out earlier this week for a few of us in the blogging community to help pick up a little of the slack at GigaOm caused by Om’s convalescence. I was asked if I would contribut…

Published on January 8th, 2008 under , , ,

Facebook should buy Plaxo

Source: saunderslog.com

Scoble’s banning from Facebook is provoking a lot of discussion in the blogosphere amongst Americans. The discussion centers around whether Scoble should be allowed to export his socia…

Published on January 4th, 2008 under , ,

Privacy International slams US and UK

Source: saunderslog.com

Over the holidays I had the opportunity to have dinner with American friends where, unsurprisingly, the topic of the war in Iraq was discussed.  While the US Patriot Act’s egregious civ…

Published on January 1st, 2008 under , , , , ,

Privacy and Prejudice.

Source: saunderslog.com

Over on the Skype Journal, Jim Courtney has written a blockbuster post titled Privacy and Prejudice: An Interruption 2.0 Manifesto for the AlwaysOn Lifestyle.  Based on his experiences using…

Published on February 21st, 2007 under

Privacy in a location, location, location world

Source: saunderslog.com

Randall Strauss’s piece Cellphone as Tracker: X Marks Your Doubts raises some uniquely American concerns about privacy and location based services.  The Helio Drift, with Buddy Beacon,…

Published on November 20th, 2006 under

The ISP Privacy Pledge

Source: saunderslog.com

Unlike Mark Goldberg, I welcome the ISP Privacy Pledge initiative put forward by Online Rights Canada.  The pledge is a very concrete way to send a message to Parliament that privacy is important,…

Published on October 4th, 2006 under , ,

Zfone: Secure VOIP Telephony Pretty Good VOIP

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

Philip R. Zimmermann is the creator of Pretty Good Privacy, an email encryption software package. Originally designed as a human rights tool, PGP was published for free on the Internet in 1991,…

Published on September 19th, 2006 under , , , , , , ,

Your privacy pitted against context and reputation based systems

Source: saunderslog.com

In the wake of the AOL search engine data fiasco, there have been a number of writers writing about the amount of data being collected by search engines, and other web sites, and how that data…

Published on August 11th, 2006 under

Google Analytics and Privacy

Source: saunderslog.com

Some very good commentary on the newly released Google Analytics, and Google’s Privacy Policy for the same on Bogle’s Blog. …

Published on November 14th, 2005 under ,
Member of "Hype Media! Network"