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‘PRID301 - Dissertation’

Privacy Matters - Development Site

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

To help keep things more structured and organised i have decided to dedicate a project site for the research and experiments which will contribute to my final year project.

All future posts will be posted at the new url “http://www.minimalistics.co.uk/idat/privacy/

Regain Your Privacy!

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

So for the past couple of weeks i have been heavily investing my time into the research of privacy, or rather the lack of within cyberspace. After reading countless articles and numerous chapters in published material i have become to gain a better understanding and view regarding our privacy online.

Part of my research has included looking at what people have done to try and combat this problem.
My main interest is to look at the effect that google has on the web and our personal data so i have been mainly looking at google based applications/artworks tackling the difficult subject of privacy.

Scroogle! Scroogle.org
Scroogle is a secure method for searching online protecting your privacy. By using its service it stops Google from leaving cookies, tracing your ip, and leaves google with no idea who has sent the search queries, enabling any user to stay anonymous.

Google: I want your soul
A short film/animation revealing information about Google.

TrackmeNot http://www.mrl.nyu.edu/~dhowe/trackmenot/
“TrackMeNot is a lightweight browser extension that helps protect web searchers from surveillance and data-profiling by search engines. It does so not by means of concealment or encryption (i.e. covering one’s tracks), but instead, paradoxically, by the opposite strategy: noise and obfuscation. With TrackMeNot, actual web searches, lost in a cloud of false leads, are essentially hidden in plain view. User-installed TrackMeNot works with the Firefox Browser and popular search engines (AOL, Yahoo!, Google, and MSN) and requires no 3rd-party servers or services.”

My Google Search History - Launch site
“My Google Search History is a set of movies, sounds and text inventory with all my search requests done since 2006 on Google search engine.
Displayed as an inventory, my searchs show a full selfportrait.
Like a big souvenir movie, this video can refresh the small things i was looking for at specific moments.”

The Search Wall http://www.thesearchwall.net
“The Search Wall is a collaborative tele-interactive art work reflecting what people are searching for on the Internet. Privacy issues almost daily make news and are a large concern for many of the Internet’s users. However, through daily usage of search engines we nevertheless willingly gradually disclose it.”

FACELESS http://www.ambienttv.net/content/?q=faceless
“Wanting to tell a story, you choose video as the appropriate medium. You look for locations, only to discover that every place has already been filmed and featured. The question arises: why shoot more footage in places which have permanent cameras monitoring every corner, recording every move 24 hours a day? Rather than bringing in more cameras, why not use the  existing recordings that capture London’s daily life from every angle?” more

TheBigPlot http://www.thebigplot.net
Coming Soon

Carnivore http://r-s-g.org/carnivore/
“Carnivore is a surveillance tool for data networks. At the heart of the project is CarnivorePE, a software application that listens to all Internet traffic (email, web surfing, etc.) on a specific local network. Next, CarnivorePE serves this data stream to interfaces called “clients.” These clients are designed to animate, diagnose, or interpret the network traffic in various ways. Use CarnivorePE to run Carnivore clients from your own desktop, or use it to make your own clients.”

The Surveillance Camera Players http://www.notbored.org/the-scp.html

Google is watching!

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

A recent video i came across wen researching googles data logging.
This was shot in building 41 in Googles headquaters.

Original Site Link

Do you know what data your toolbar is collecting on you?

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

Just stumbled accross this video whilst researching privacy issues related to the google toolbar. I’m sure it will be an eye opener to some people.

An interesting interview with Steve Ballmer CEO at Microsoft.

To read the full article over at techcrunch.com click here

What Google openly admits to collecting

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

I recently stumbled across a short video made by Googles Maile Ohye, one of the “support enginers” at Google Inc. The video goes into a simple exmplanation of googles privacy and what private information google stores when you make a simple search query.

Very well explained and even has some lovely diagrams….

Dissertation Proposal

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

Proposed Title:

As the web technologies advance are we giving away too much information about personal lives? Should we be taking steps to enable anonymous browsing of the Internet?

Outline:

The area that I am most interested in and wish to explore revolves around the many issues and debates with regards to anonymous browsing and digital privacy on the web. Some of the issues that I would like to research further include; Have we  become ignorant to the fact that nearly every step we take on the web can be logged, traced, stored and used to “help improve” our web experience?
A major debate online questions Google Inc’s Privacy Policies and their attitude to data privacy. With the slogan “Don’t Be Evil” how can we be sure that this is not a tactical ploy to reel us in and to make us feel safe?

By looking at current debates in this topic area I plan to investigate the motives of capturing and mining data on the web and the effects of these actions. Are these motives for the good of the public or just a sneaky way to increasing profitability, hits and above all gaining even more market share? Or, are their methods for the good of the user’s web experience?

By conducting this investigation I want to understand why and how these companies gather, utilise and process our data. Determining whether or not the power and information that these businesses hold on us as individuals is being used to benefit the end user or benefit the companies themselves. From the second we log on to their websites they are aware of a multitude of information, ranging from what operating system we are running to personal information such as our location. For example Google offer a range of services and by signing up to just a few of their services they will know where you live, your age, and even your bank account details. As Google now own some of our largest online and offline services and products are they really looking after our data or are they using it to take over the web? At present our personal data is in safe hands, or so we would like to think. However, what impact could it have on our lives if companies such as Google change their tactics, policies, or owners?

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