Computers, Privacy & the Constitution

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 -- By BrianS - 27 Feb 2010
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Section I

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The Past: Google Books

In 2002, Google took its first steps towards digitizing every book on the planet by launching the Google Books project. The venture involved partnerships with major libraries through which Google borrowed and scanned millions of books in the libraries' collections. Aside from making Google more money through advertising on display results, the goal of the Google Book Project was to create a searchable database for the full text of the world's books including books that were out of print and otherwise lost in time. Through partnerships with publishers, the project also made available to the public partial and full-text versions of books. Finally, Google Books also offered to consumers the option of buying

The Present: Privacy Protections for Books

Knowledge itself is power. There is no knowledge that is not power. If you don't control your mind, someone else will. Knowledge is power, if you know it about the right person.

 EFF's letter to Google. Google's brief blog response. EFF's examples of print vs. digital reading privacy. EFF's call to others to help. EFF's overview of changes requested.
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Section II

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The Future: Digital Libraries and You

The possibilities for digital libraries are incredible; full-text search options and nearly limitless preservation expansions possibilities are just the tip of the iceberg. Beneath the surface are more innovative advancements like the simplification of digital personal libraries, tools that map book contents onto real space (and vice versa), and the power to follow a passage through a timeline of works. Other tools will follow. Most importantly, however, digital libraries would would dramatically increase access to information both through access terminals in libraries and through the Google Books website. And Google is not the only digital library, it justs happens to be the one getting the most press lately. Project Gutenberg, the Universal Digital Library, the World Digital Library, and Europeana are just a few other examples of digital libraries under construction.

As it has elsewhere, technological evolution empowers social advancement but it simultaneously empowers a loss of privacy and, correlatively, a loss of autonomy. The power to follow your friends' lives is also the power for companies to [[http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/soa/Logged-in-or-out-Facebook-is-watching-you/0,130061744,339284281,00.htm[datamine]] your social personality and preferences. The power to monitor what you are reading, how long you spend page by page, and what you write in the margins---and to market that information to others---poses a substantial threat to privacy and autonomy. The risk that such information will be swept up by any subpoena holder is tangible and concerning. The question we now face is how we should respond to the dangers our new informational blessings bestow.

 
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Section III

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At the moment, however, our privacy is adrift on bureaucratic winds. Until our privacy is guarded by sturdier stuff, digital library users are at risk.
 Now put down that book and back away slowly, citizen.

Revision 3r3 - 14 Mar 2010 - 10:04:24 - BrianS
Revision 2r2 - 13 Mar 2010 - 07:33:21 - BrianS
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