07 Privacy and Surveillance
07 Privacy and Surveillance
07 Privacy and Surveillance
• What is privacy?
• Why is it worth protecting?
• Who and how can your privacy be
invaded?
• How do new technologies such as
facial recognition affect your privacy?
1 What is privacy?
What does privacy mean
to you?
Discussion What does privacy mean to you?
3 minutes Recall examples of someone
Go to menti.com and use
password: 6492 9619
intruding on your privacy
Privacy can
mean different
things to
different people
– Survey
Distinguishing between privacy
exercise
5. An app collecting your location data without your consent
6. Someone revealing your membership in a political party at
Go to menti.com and use dinner
password: 6492 9619 7. Reporters deceitfully gain entry to a person’s home and secretly
photograph and record him
8. Prohibition on reassignment surgery for transsexual people
9. New X-ray devices that can see through people’s clothing,
amounting to what some call a “virtual strip-search”
10. Someone tracking your location all the time
11. Smart TV recording conversations in your home
Privacy As A Legal Right
What is a • The power, granted by the government to persons,
to allow or disallow others from taking certain
actions, through legal force.
legal right?
Universal Declaration of
Human Rights
1948
Article 12
Fourth Amendment
2 Surveillance
• Information privacy
• A of lot data is being collected and
shared without users’ informed
consent
• Decisional/associational privacy
• Surveillance has chilling effects
that make people less likely to
associate with certain groups
• Hinders self-development
• Intellectual privacy
• Surveillance can cause people not
to experiment with new,
controversial, or deviant ideas
Harms beyond privacy
• Freedom of thought and expression
• People less likely to attend rallies and speak about controversial things
• Self-censorship and inhibition
• May stifle innovation
• Surveillance stifles the space needed to ‘freely tinker’, which is necessary for
innovation – related to intellectual privacy
Power imbalance between
the watcher and watched
Mandatory Reading
• 22 Hildebrandt, M. (2020). Law for Computer Scientists and Other Folk. OUP Open access. Chapter
7 ‘Copyright in Cyberspace’, esp 197-200.
• 23 Rosati, E. (2019). Copyright As An Obstacle or An Enabler? A European Perspective on Text and
Data Mining and its Role in the Development of AI Creativity. Asia Pacific Law Review; Hong Kong
27(2,) 198-217.
• 25 Carroll, M. W. (2015). Sharing research data and intellectual property law: A primer. PLoS
Bology, 13(8).
https://perma.cc/ZG8Z-KY6E
AI and Data Ethics
Introduction
Page 57