Siva Vaidhyanathan says "no thanks" to Time magazine naming "you" Person of the Year. From his essay on MSNBC.com: ... Well, thank you, Time, for hyping me, overvaluing me, using me to sell my image back to me, profiling me,…
Month: December 2006
Wikiasari, an Open, Wiki-based Search Engine
The Times.uk reports that Jimmy Wales, the co-founder of Wikipedia wants to build and open, wiki-based web search engine to rival Google. The search engine will be called Wikiasari — a combination of wiki, the Hawaiian word for quick, and…
Polar Rose: More Amateur Facial Recognition
Another facial recognition search engine product has launched - Polar Rose. This New Scientist Tech article notes some of the privacy concerns: Polar Rose and future developments that make facial recognition available to the masses risk encroaching on people's privacy,…
The five-things-you-didn’t-know-about-me meme
Seth Finkelstein has tagged me with the “five things you don’t know about me” meme spreading through the blogosphere, and I figure if Seth is game enough to play, I can too 🙂 About 8 years ago, before I returned…
Privacy, Libraries, ALA and FBI
I recently discovered Don Wood's blog Library 2.0 (thanks Library Juice!). Don is the Program Officer/Communications at the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom, whose goals is to educate librarians and the general public about the nature and importance…
NYT on Cellphone Surveillance
The NY Times has a feature today on the prevalence of GPS-enabled cell phones for the surveillance of one's kids. (Boost Mobile [page has audio] has also been pitching their GPS tracking features to adults so you can "know where…
Entrenchment of Non-Privacy Norms Online
Gaia Bernstein, an Associate Professor at Seton Hall University School of Law (and guest blogger over at Law & Technology Theory) has a thoughtful post about how particular diffusion characteristics made the Internet vulnerable to the establishment of what she…
Consumers Willing to Trade Privacy for Personalization, Survey Says
A new study by ChoiceStream, a (surprise!) provider of online personalization products, announces their latest personalization survey reveals an increasing number of web users are willing to provide personal information in order to receive personalized services. From the summary at…
Read More Consumers Willing to Trade Privacy for Personalization, Survey Says
IINW in First Monday
I am pleased to announce that selected papers from the “Identity and Identification in a Networked World” graduate student symposium held at New York University in September have been published in a special issue of First Monday. Here are titles…
Bendrath on the Politics of “Identity Governance”
Ralf Bendrath has a thoughtful post on Oracle's recently announced "Identity Governance Framework", a set of draft standards for sharing and controlling personally identifiable information across different systems and applications. He was particularly struck by the use of the term…

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