Privacy ProjectOvjeren akaunt

@PrivacyProject

The New York Times Opinion Section’s ongoing examination of privacy. 👀

Vrijeme pridruživanja: ožujak 2019.

Medijski sadržaj

  1. "It's a matter of stepping back and refusing behaviors that we know are not in our best interests. Either individually or collectively," writes gking01 in a comment on 's column, "Be Paranoid About Privacy."

  2. "Fortunately my agency has no appetite for that kind of invasion of privacy," writes Jamster in a comment on Stuart A. Thompson and Charlie Warzel's Op-Ed, "Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy."

  3. . and pieced together some stories from Pasadena, Calif., over a period of several months. Their eye in the sky wasn’t a network of traffic cams or satellites. It was the data spewing from smartphone apps.

  4. Worried about being tracked? and Gus Wezerek have some tips:

  5. You should be concerned even if you think you have nothing to hide, argues

  6. "Is a person's backyard, or for that matter, their 200-acre pasture, considered public space just because a person is outdoors?" writes Shonun from Oregon in a comment on "Are We Read for Satellites That See Our Every Move?"

  7. "Police databases now feature the faces of nearly half of Americans — most of whom have no idea their image is there," says

  8. "Congress must declare a national moratorium on the use of face-recognition technology until legal restrictions limiting its use and scope can be developed," argues

  9. Data dignity may not sound possible. But it is. Here’s how to make it work in the real world.

  10. In the face of increasing automation, Jaron Lanier argues that “a dignified data economy is not an option, but a necessity.”

  11. "Don’t believe that you’re worthless. It’s a lie. Don’t believe it," says Jaron Lanier. "I am certain that a dignified data economy is not an option, but a necessity.”

  12. “If we’re going to be surpassed by artificial intelligence, if we won’t be needed, why are we here?” Why Jaron Lanier is fighting for data dignity.

  13. Say yes to value, and no to manipulation. This is a dignified future when it comes to your data, says Jaron Lanier.

  14. If you’ve ever made a purchase from an ad you've seen on social media, a company has made commission off of you. Jaron Lanier argues that you should be getting paid instead.

  15. As you're reading this, your data is being grabbed to trick you in the future. Here’s how to stop your data from being snatched for free, and how you could get paid for it instead.

  16. Say yes to value, and no to manipulation. This is a dignified future when it comes to your data, says Jaron Lanier.

  17. We’re going to need a new entity to help you get paid for your data. Enter the MID: mediator of individual data.

  18. We’ve told you that data is the new oil, and that you should be getting paid for it. But, how does that happen in the real world? Jaron Lanier has a plan.

  19. Your data isn’t just valuable -- it’s the new oil.

  20. See that ad in the corner? A company is using your data to get you to click. Here’s how you could be getting paid for your data instead.

Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.

Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.

    Možda bi vam se svidjelo i ovo:

    ·