AndreiVoinigescuPaper2 9 - 06 Jan 2009 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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< < | Anonymity, Fictional Identities and Online Malfeasance | > > | This is a work in progress.. | | -- By AndreiVoinigescu | |
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< < | Anatomy of a Problem
1. Cyberbullying
2. Defamation
3. Encouraging Illegal Behavior
The Proposed Solution, Legal Hurdles, and the Collateral Damage
1. Building an Identity Layer into the Internet
2. The Constitution Protects Anonymous Speech?
3. And killing anonymity is bad for a number of other reasons too--the collateral damage
Why Anonymity and Pseudoanonymity are Important
1. Preserving free speech
2. Protecting autonomy by impeding the attribution of an online behavioral profile to a specific individual
3. Enabling people to seek help, support and comraderie
Reconciliation and a few suggestions for moving forward
1. Most online behavior can already be traced back to an individual by supena of ISP, which achieves the right balance of protection for anonymity, because a judge is in the decision-making loop. (Current RIAA lawsuits notwithstanding)
2. Creating tools which enable the community to self-police -- the lessons from Wiki-vandalism
3. Education, experience and a new social common sense. More skepticism about the truth of online content as old expectations from the days of newspaper publishing and fact-checking fade, and less offense as people learn to grow a thicker skin. | > > | Introduction
Privacy advocates are up in arms about the recent explosion in the monitoring, recording and analysis of people's online activities. The private sector, meanwhile, is investing heavily in compiling behavioral profiles of Internet users: In 2007, AOL, Yahoo and Google spent $3.6 billion to purchase behavioral targeting firms Tacoda, Blue Lithium and Double Click, while Microsoft spent $240 million for a 1.6% share of Facebook. In the wake of senate hearings into web privacy, a number of large ISPs have backed away from partnerships with behavioral advertising networks which would have seen them deploying deep packet inspection (DPI) to snoop on users' surfing habits, stressing that any future monitoring for advertising purposes will be on an opt-in basis with express consent from the users being watched. So what is all the fuss about?
The All-Seeing Eye
Monitoring and analyzing user's online activities is not new. Behavioral advertising companies like NebuAd? and Phorm track keywords on visited websites and search engine queries (with ISP cooperation), creating profiles (linked to individual computers) used to infer likely purchase interest in each of the rougly 1000 "useful but innocuous" product categories. NebuAd? and Phorm can categorize users quite narrowly. They can identify users interested in a vacation to a particular destination, or in buying a particular brand of used car. But while the ISP-Ad Network partnership allows for unprecedented comprehensiveness in monitoring a user's online behavior, individual e-commerce websites have been analyzing visitor's behavior at a high level of granularity for years now. Amazon.com, for instance, tracks clickstream data--the pages users visit, the time they spend there, and how they interact with each page--down to the level of individual scrolls, clicks and mouse-overs.
But what are companies actually doing with the data they collect? With a few notable exceptions, nothing revolutionary. Behavioral advertising networks use the profiles they generate to facilitate more nuanced audience segmentation. Where ads before could be targeted based on crude age and gender demographics, NebuAd? and Phorm allow advertisers to carve out their audience according to temporally salient interests. While this is a clear win for marketers, a recent survey reveals that 57% of internet users are uncomfortable with advertisers using their browsing history--even if anonymized--to serve relevant ads.
Are targeted ads a threat to privacy or autonomy? Perhaps not. While there is something offensive about the push nature of advertising in general--a reaction potentially exacerbated when you know an unsolicited ad is directed specifically at you--internet advertising is easily blocked. And whatever the actual empirical effect of advertising on purchase decisions, most people believe that they ultimately full control over whether or not to buy. In their current categorical classification based form, the NebuAd? and Phorm ad networks don't really provide much finer-grained audience segmentation than specialty magazines have been providing for years. Is more transparency all that is needed, or should we worry that the private sector will exploit knowledge of our online activities in ways that we do not desire?
Information about an individual, no matter how detailed, only threatens autonomy to the degree that others can interpret and use it. While corporations may now have access to an unprecedented amount of data about their customers and potential customers, they are still, for the most part, relying on common-sense marketing knowledge when it comes to figuring out how to convert that data into sales. | |
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AndreiVoinigescuPaper2 8 - 26 Dec 2008 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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< < | Working Title: The Fourth Estate | > > | Anonymity, Fictional Identities and Online Malfeasance | | -- By AndreiVoinigescu | |
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< < | Introduction
The changing face of the media and implications for free speech policy.
Newspapers, Broadcasters used to be able to make 20, 30% profits because of monopoly power/local advertising appeal; this allowed them to invest in investigative journalism and over-seas reporters and local stories. These are the first things that get cut once media starts loosing money because technological change has destroyed their monopoly on advertising.
Citizen bloggers can cover local and state-level issues.
Citizens bloggers are both more vulnerable to free speech chilling effects but also more resistant to outright censorship.
Signs of the death of print and broadcast media are everywhere these days:
The Fourth Estate: Media as watchdogs
Push beats pull and the death of the captive audience
A future full of news no one pays attention to?
Conclusion
Working Section
Is investigative journalism essential to our political system? Can investigative journalism be done outside traditional commercial newsgathering organizations? What will happen to investigative journalism as print newspaper become unprofitable? Is the copyright system essential to producing sustained works of effort like investigative journalism? In copyright law's current form? What about broadcasting monopolies? Are they essential? Can other actors step in to subsume the role of investigative journalism? Publicly sponsored? By government taxes? By charity? By patrons? What can be learned from the credit agencies' failure? Credit ratings are sometimes referred to as "the shortest editorial." Is investigative journalism a similarly flawed system?
The net has lowered the cost of collaboration. Has the net lowered the cost of investigative journalism?
Perhaps what is needed for investigative journalism isn't money -- it's the concentrated power of the media company behind the investigator? This leads to potential 'coupling' between media and those in power.
The credibility came from the name of the organization -- they engaged in 'reporting'. You trusted them. Pre-publishment screening vs post-publishment 'digg' style sorting.
The news media put people into power. Television was the most power-concentrating medium in the world because there was no answering television without your own license to broadcast. | > > | Anatomy of a Problem
1. Cyberbullying
2. Defamation
3. Encouraging Illegal Behavior
The Proposed Solution, Legal Hurdles, and the Collateral Damage
1. Building an Identity Layer into the Internet
2. The Constitution Protects Anonymous Speech?
3. And killing anonymity is bad for a number of other reasons too--the collateral damage
Why Anonymity and Pseudoanonymity are Important
1. Preserving free speech
2. Protecting autonomy by impeding the attribution of an online behavioral profile to a specific individual
3. Enabling people to seek help, support and comraderie
Reconciliation and a few suggestions for moving forward
1. Most online behavior can already be traced back to an individual by supena of ISP, which achieves the right balance of protection for anonymity, because a judge is in the decision-making loop. (Current RIAA lawsuits notwithstanding)
2. Creating tools which enable the community to self-police -- the lessons from Wiki-vandalism
3. Education, experience and a new social common sense. More skepticism about the truth of online content as old expectations from the days of newspaper publishing and fact-checking fade, and less offense as people learn to grow a thicker skin. | | |
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AndreiVoinigescuPaper2 7 - 08 Dec 2008 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Working Title: The Fourth Estate | |
Introduction | |
> > | The changing face of the media and implications for free speech policy.
Newspapers, Broadcasters used to be able to make 20, 30% profits because of monopoly power/local advertising appeal; this allowed them to invest in investigative journalism and over-seas reporters and local stories. These are the first things that get cut once media starts loosing money because technological change has destroyed their monopoly on advertising.
Citizen bloggers can cover local and state-level issues.
Citizens bloggers are both more vulnerable to free speech chilling effects but also more resistant to outright censorship. | | Signs of the death of print and broadcast media are everywhere these days:
The Fourth Estate: Media as watchdogs |
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AndreiVoinigescuPaper2 6 - 01 Dec 2008 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Working Title: The Fourth Estate | |
Introduction | |
> > | Signs of the death of print and broadcast media are everywhere these days: | | | |
> > | The Fourth Estate: Media as watchdogs
Push beats pull and the death of the captive audience
A future full of news no one pays attention to?
Conclusion
Working Section | | Is investigative journalism essential to our political system? Can investigative journalism be done outside traditional commercial newsgathering organizations? What will happen to investigative journalism as print newspaper become unprofitable? Is the copyright system essential to producing sustained works of effort like investigative journalism? In copyright law's current form? What about broadcasting monopolies? Are they essential? Can other actors step in to subsume the role of investigative journalism? Publicly sponsored? By government taxes? By charity? By patrons? What can be learned from the credit agencies' failure? Credit ratings are sometimes referred to as "the shortest editorial." Is investigative journalism a similarly flawed system?
The net has lowered the cost of collaboration. Has the net lowered the cost of investigative journalism? | | The news media put people into power. Television was the most power-concentrating medium in the world because there was no answering television without your own license to broadcast. | |
< < | Paragraph 1
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Conclusion
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(totally off-topic) Hypothesis: Value Formation is Reactionary: Values arise/gain prominence in a community as a direct response to previous conditions within that community that a majority of its members find intuitively unacceptable--in response to gut-wrenching injustice. | | | |
< < | Thus, many new issues arise in value-neutral or value-sparse space, where existing values offer either little or no guidence on how to proceed. | | |
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AndreiVoinigescuPaper2 5 - 20 Nov 2008 - Main.AndreiVoinigescu
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META TOPICPARENT | name="WebPreferences" |
Working Title: The Fourth Estate | | Is investigative journalism essential to our political system? Can investigative journalism be done outside traditional commercial newsgathering organizations? What will happen to investigative journalism as print newspaper become unprofitable? Is the copyright system essential to producing sustained works of effort like investigative journalism? In copyright law's current form? What about broadcasting monopolies? Are they essential? Can other actors step in to subsume the role of investigative journalism? Publicly sponsored? By government taxes? By charity? By patrons? What can be learned from the credit agencies' failure? Credit ratings are sometimes referred to as "the shortest editorial." Is investigative journalism a similarly flawed system? | |
> > | The net has lowered the cost of collaboration. Has the net lowered the cost of investigative journalism?
Perhaps what is needed for investigative journalism isn't money -- it's the concentrated power of the media company behind the investigator? This leads to potential 'coupling' between media and those in power.
The credibility came from the name of the organization -- they engaged in 'reporting'. You trusted them. Pre-publishment screening vs post-publishment 'digg' style sorting.
The news media put people into power. Television was the most power-concentrating medium in the world because there was no answering television without your own license to broadcast. | | Paragraph 1
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 3 |
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