Ubiquitous Surveillance: Difference between revisions
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'''Edited by David Parry ''' | |||
==== '''Ubiquitous Mobile Persistent Surveillance'''<br><br> ==== | ==== '''Introduction: ''''''Ubiquitous Mobile Persistent Surveillance'''<br><br> ==== | ||
In 1996 when John Perry Bartlow wrote ''A Cyberspace Independence Declaration'', internet pioneers hoped that the online world Bartlow was describing would come to pass. While Bartlow’s rhetoric was admittedly 'grandiose,' his central claim, that the internet was a place of freedom separate from the limits of the physical world, reflected the utopic atmosphere of the time. The technological revolution, in particular the rise of the digital network, seemed to point to a future 'where anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity' (Bartlow, 1996). While not everyone in the late 90s could be characterized as a cyberutopian, the dominant mood harbored a sense that the digital network would bring with it newfound, unregulatable freedoms. [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Surveillance/Introduction More] <br> <br> | In 1996 when John Perry Bartlow wrote ''A Cyberspace Independence Declaration'', internet pioneers hoped that the online world Bartlow was describing would come to pass. While Bartlow’s rhetoric was admittedly 'grandiose,' his central claim, that the internet was a place of freedom separate from the limits of the physical world, reflected the utopic atmosphere of the time. The technological revolution, in particular the rise of the digital network, seemed to point to a future 'where anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity' (Bartlow, 1996). While not everyone in the late 90s could be characterized as a cyberutopian, the dominant mood harbored a sense that the digital network would bring with it newfound, unregulatable freedoms. [http://www.livingbooksaboutlife.org/books/Surveillance/Introduction More] <br> <br> |
Revision as of 13:27, 6 September 2011
Edited by David Parry
'Introduction: 'Ubiquitous Mobile Persistent Surveillance
In 1996 when John Perry Bartlow wrote A Cyberspace Independence Declaration, internet pioneers hoped that the online world Bartlow was describing would come to pass. While Bartlow’s rhetoric was admittedly 'grandiose,' his central claim, that the internet was a place of freedom separate from the limits of the physical world, reflected the utopic atmosphere of the time. The technological revolution, in particular the rise of the digital network, seemed to point to a future 'where anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity' (Bartlow, 1996). While not everyone in the late 90s could be characterized as a cyberutopian, the dominant mood harbored a sense that the digital network would bring with it newfound, unregulatable freedoms. More
Knowing Everything: Data Mining
Daniel Gayo-Avello All Liaisons are Dangerous When All Your Friends Are Known to Us
Sang Hoon Lee Googling Social Interactions: Web Search Engine Based Social Network Construction
Mahnoosh Khloghi and Mohammadreza Keyvanpour An Analytical Framework for Data Stream Mining Techniques Based on Challenges and Requirements
Tamer Abuhmed et al. A Survey on Deep Packet Inspection for Intrusion Detection System
Somebody is Watching You: Video Surveillance
Yassine Benabbas, Nacim Ihaddadene, and Chaabane Djeraba Motion Pattern Extraction and Even Detection for Automatic Visual Surveillance
Alexander Artikis and Georgios Paliouras A Logic Programming Approach to Behaviour Recognition
T.P. Pushpavath et al. GPRS Video Streaming Surveillance System GVS
Renzo De Nard et al. SwarMAV: A Swarm of Miniature Aerial Vehicles
Monitoring Bodies: Surveilling Health
Daniel Chandramohan et al. Should Data from Demographic Surveillance Systems Be Made More Widely Available to Researchers
Alireza Taravat Najafabad et al. Web GIS and Public Health
Stuart Rennie et al. Conducting Unlinked Anonymous HIV Surveillance in Developing Countries: Ethical, Epidemiological, and Public Health Concerns
Emily Chan et al. Using Web Search Query Data to Monitor Dengue Epidemics: A New Model for Neglected Tropical Disease Surveillance
Judging Privacy: Legal Issues
Samuel D. Warren, Louis D. Brandeis The Right to Privacy
Daniel J. Solove Data Mining and the Security-Liberty Debate
Omer Tene What Google Knows: Privacy and Internet Search Engines
Paul Ohm The Rise and Fall of Invasive ISP Surveillance
Appendix: How It Works
Emily Steel A Web Pioneer Profiles Users by Name
The Wall Street Journal Cracking the Code
Ted Morgan Location makes mobile Mobile
David Bond Erasing David
Ondi Timoner We Live in Public