Posts Tagged ‘privacy’

Unsettled

Friday, February 19th, 2010

At yesterday’s Google Book Settlement Fairness Hearing, 26 folks took the stand before Judge Chin – 21 said, “No fair!”, 5 said, “All’s fair in love, war and the transparent society.”  Those 5 were Howard U Law School’s Lateef Mtima, Sony’s Janet Cullum, National Federation of the Blind’s Marc Maurer, U of Michigan librarian Paul Courant and Center for Democracy and Technology’s John Morris (who has, like, some minor concerns, but still supports the settlement).  Predictably, the harshest criticism came not from Microsoft’s or Amazon’s representatives (guess this means no Googlezon, yeah?) but from EPIC‘ s.

Cindy Cohn, of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, represented 28 authors and publishers concerned with privacy issues. “The court is asked to approve a library/bookstore combination that has unlimited ability to track readers.” She said that the plaintiff’s supplemental brief says they agree with Cohn’s position, but offers no specifics on what the parties would do. Chin asked for clarification, pointing to the example of when he orders a book via Amazon, saying that he gets a message that says, “if you like this book, try this one.”  “Should I get concerned?” he asked.

Cohn said the ability “to track what you read is granular and continual.” Chin asked if it was fixable; Cohn responded that Google should be required to have a court order to turn over personal information to law enforcement officials. “This is a fight libraries and bookstores have fought,” she said. Later, she suggested Google should mitigate privacy concerns by deleting user data after 30 days.

***

Marc Rotenberg, of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, offered a more critical take on privacy than previous speakers. “I disagree that the problem can be cured.”

The settlement parties have untethered the privacy obligations that public libraries are subject to, he said. “There is simply no precedent for tracking people in this fashion,” he argued, citing processes like user authentication and watermarking.

Chin asked why it couldn’t be fixed. “It must be in the design of the technology,” Rotenberg said.

Objectors Outnumber Supporters in First Half of Google Settlement Fairness Hearing” by Norman Oder, Library Journal 2-18-10

Judge Chin said he’ll make a decision when he makes a decision.  More at ResourceShelf.

Also left in legal limbo yesterday was local violist Jordan Miles.

A hearing for a Homewood teen who claims three Pittsburgh police officers beat him during his arrest last month was postponed for a second time Thursday while the FBI and the city investigate the officers’ actions.

Attorney Kerry Lewis, who argued against the delay, said his client Jordan Miles is entitled to a timely hearing and asked District Judge Oscar Petite Jr. to dismiss his charges.

Mr. Miles, 18, is due in court March 4. He was charged with aggravated assault and resisting arrest in a Jan. 12 incident in which police said he was “sneaking around” a house on Tioga Street in Homewood with a heavy object in his coat that they thought was a gun.

Mr. Miles criminal complaint says he ran from plainclothes officers Richard Ewing, Michael Saldutte and David Sisak when they ordered him to stop and assaulted two of them. Police said object in his coat turned out to be a bottle of Mountain Dew, which Mr. Lewis denied Thursday.

Hearing on hold for teen who claims he was beaten” by Sadie Gurman, P-G 2-19-10
Whose criminal complaint?  Mr. Miles’, perhaps?  No police but punctuation police!
Have fun and – hang on, I’m getting a beep.

Scanners Live in Vanity Fair

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

“They have met and have voted and sworn. You will make Scanners unnecessary, they say. You will bring the Ancient Wars back to the world, if Scanning is lost and the Scanners live in vain!”

Cordwainer Smith

Amelia’s manners were such when she and George visited Crawley and his wife at these quarters, that they had very nearly come to their first quarrel; that is, George scolded his wife violently for her evident unwillingness to go, and the high and mighty manner in which she comported herself towards Mrs. Crawley, her old friend; and Amelia did not say one single word in reply; but with her husband’s eye upon her, and Rebecca scanning her as she felt, was, if possible, more bashful and awkward on the second visit which she paid to Mrs. Rawdon, than on her first call.

William Thackeray

Since that underwear thing happened, it’s just scanners, scanners, scanners, you know?  While some fear the virtual contours of their body being mocked or wanked over by the Man, others don’t.  Whatevs.  Those opposed to the scanners can at least all agree the dang things are ineffective and expensive – another ho-hum terror-driven racket – but we still don’t know how dangerous they are.  Ionizing X-radiation aside,

The National Council on Radiation Protection & Measurements, which vouched for the ACR’s position on the backscatter radiation scanners, hasn’t reached a conclusion on the millimeter-wave technology, its president, Thomas Tenforde, Ph.D., told Diagnostic Imaging. The NCRP, which operates under a Congressional charter, would like to take a look at the new technology, but hasn’t had the opportunity so far.

Millimeter-wave scanners are probably within bounds, Tenforde said, but there should be an effort to verify that they are safe for frequent use. According to Tenforde, standards have been established for RF exposures up to 300 gigahertz, but millimeter-wave technology may operate outside those established standards, and potential bioeffects need to be evaluated.

Also, one study by a group at Los Alamos National Labs argues that terahertz radiation, which, although in the RF spectrum, is much higher than the 300 GHz level, does have bioeffects. The study also cites other papers finding bioeffects from exposure to the THz spectrum. The Los Alamos researchers say that while the forces generated are tiny, resonant effects could allow THz waves to unzip double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication. The study describes a model for assessing the bioeffects of THz radiation and is drawing attention from critics of the whole-body scanners.

“Whole-body airport scanners are basically safe – or are they?” by John C. Hayes, Diagnostic Imaging 1-8-10

Course, you can always opt for an old-school Preston Nichols-style hand scan if you like your DNA just fine the way it is, thanks.  I do recommend submitting to the mind-scan, however – it might be completely idiotic, but it’s still preferable to the alternative.

Have fun and cuídate.

UPDATE 2-5-10

Pregnant women and children should not be subject to scanning, even though the radiation dose from body scanners is “extremely small,” said the Inter-Agency Committee on Radiation Safety report, which is restricted to the agencies concerned and not meant for public circulation. The group includes the European Commission, International Atomic Energy Agency, Nuclear Energy Agency and the World Health Organization.

Airport Body Scanning Raises Radiation Exposure, Committee Says” by Jonathan Tirone, Bloomberg 2-5-10