Patrice Riemens on Sat, 1 Mar 2014 15:36:41 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Ippolita Collective, In the Facebook Aquarium, Part One, section 7, |
NB. There will be an interruption in the translation flow for a few days as I am moving to Firenze, where I'll have little or no connectivity - nor very much time. Feuilleton likely to be revived after March 5th. Doewie! ----- Privacy no more (continued) Or, more simply: As I don't want to go out with you tonight, I should be able to tell you I'm tired - and that's it. I don't want you to feel hurt, or worse still, you to think I'm making fun of you or taking you for a ride, all this because the next day, you're going to find out on a common friend's Facebook wall that I wasn't at home the previous night, and actually had gone to a party with other friends. Social life is far more complex than radical transparency is able to anticipate, unless we are prepared to shed of the largest part of us that makes us different (from others), and which is precisely what renders us attractive and desirable (to others), and also ensures that we do not simply become lost in a group where all hold the same opinion on all things. The personal data we entrust to social networks, foremost (#***) Facebook, are kept in the /clouds/, that informational overhang above us, a domain not under our control, quite unlike the private diary we used to guard jealously in the past. Not so long ago, account holders could not even delete their Facebook entries, whic instantly became the 'non exclusive property' of the firm, for these data to be sold to third parties. Of course, nobody was talking about copyright here. Sure, Facebook does not intend to make money with our holiday pics (OMG so lame, so wacky) nor with our posted messages (and never mind the grammar). We (the average user) are not artists ripe for the pluck and exploitation. Yet, the /data mining/ [32] taking place in order to profile individual users, all this material accumulating in data-bases, a.k.a. Big Data, constitute a serious problem. There is no free lunch, and especially not in the world of Web 2.0, where the price to be paid for the 'free service' ("It's free and always will be" proclaims Facebook's start page) is to assent to the retrieval, indexing, and exploitation of all the data in the users' profiles, and more importantly, of those pertaining to their reciprocal relations. And then (for the owners) to laugh all the way to the bank. But what about privacy then? Well, on-line sociality is based on the absence of the same, meaning on the possibility scan e-mails, pictures, blogs, texts, etc: anything that can be extrapolated by way of key words in order to show contextualised and personalised advertisements, and all this is obtained from exchanges that are usually deemed to be 'private and confidential'. Google and Facebook and all social networks in general illustrate the existence of domains (spheres) which are neither public nor private, and which are managed by technocrats, and more particularly by technocrats in the employ of private companies fueled by the profit motive. Privacy, literally speaking, is /the right to be left alone/ (#****). For this reason, speaking of privacy in a collective, but privately-owned social network is an oxymoron, since the prime objective of a network is the circulation of information. When the information consists of the identities of the people making up the network, the idea to stay out (while being part of it) is a non-goer. The only way to stay out is to not connect at all. Privacy is therefore a pie in the sky: it only comes becomes manifest when one realizes that it has been breached. Ever since the Echelon scandal [33], everybody knows that privacy doesn't exist any more - at that for quite a long while. Yet, the problem with surveillance is not so much the disapearence of privacy, as the fact that the ensuing control and monitoring extends for a long period of time. Let's stress it again: every user has (and leaves) a digital 'finger print', a unique and personal identity-marker. Being part of a network means to be connected and to leave traces of one's passage. It is the same with (tele)phones: even if I get rid of my previous mobile, I am most likely to call the same people with my new phone as with my old one, and hence, to re-draw again (the graph of) my social network. If there exist a users profile that looks like exactly the same, identification is automatic and immediate: it can only be me. The way social networks function makes this even more worrying, because usually the names of members of a group are not hidden to non-members, so as not to limit the possiblilty of not-yet members to join the group. And it is easy to generate identifiers, or trace-marks, at the group level. It is for instance possible to establish a list of all Facebook groups with one member only. (HEU? -transl) To encourage the free flow of knowledge has nothing to do with this type of 'sharing' everything and anything whatever in an automated and mandatory fashion. Copyleft (for instance, is about encouraging the free flow of knowledge, and) is something completely different: it is about sharing knowledge, bypassing obstacles formed by patent laws, trademarks and non disclosure agreements. Facebook's type of 'sharing' is not about making knowledge available in the public domain: 'published', for Facebook, does not mean to make public, but to handle information through a private company, i.e. Facebook [34]. Ongoing research is taking place around systems of /mass de-anonymizing & re-identification/, where purpose-devised algorithms are let loose on social networks. The only thing needed is to know the map of a small social network (because all the nodes must be determined) in order to use that information to re-identify (by their 'truenames') the users of a larger network. So for instance, if one is able to map, by and large, the relations existing between people who share pictures on Flickr, and then to chart that segment of them who also maintain an account on Facebook, it becomes possible to des-anonymize a large number of profiles of the largest network [35]. (to be continued) Next time: Browser history hijacking! ................ (#***) 'Facebook included' in the original. Given that _some_ social networks don't go, or at least are not kept, in the 'cloud', I opted for a starker, even FB-hostile rendering. [32] The common monicker 'data mining', literally: digging, extracting data, is most imprecise and has no technological support whatsoever. Data analysis on basis of half-automated systems is a vast and heterogenous research field. Put simply, we may say that /data mining/ is not about identifying real persons, but about the extraction on a large scale of significant correlations by way of algorithms. We can for instance distinguish /cluster analysis/: the way data are compartimentalised, or /anomaly detection/ where one looks for norm-deviant data. /Data mining/ becomes problematic when the goal is to profile users for surveillance purposes - this is the specific use of /data mining/ we are refering to here. (#****) Cf http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Right_to_Privacy_%28article%29 [33] Duncan Campbell, Surveillance électronique planétaire (global electronic surveillance), Paris, Albin Michel, 2001 (I couldn't find a/the english language edition of this book, might have been published in french only. Duncan Campbell has however written numerous articles - in english - on the subject, see: http://www.duncancampbell.org/content/echelon -transl) [34] See the postface of the INC edition of Ippolita Collective, The Dark Side of Google (2013): (http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/publication/no-13-the-dark-side-of-google-ippolita/) [35] Arvind Narayanam, Vitaly Shmatikov, De-anonymizing Social Networks, Proceedings of the 2009 30th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy Pages 173-187 abstract + pdf at: http://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings/sp/2009/3633/00/3633a173-abs.html ----------------------------- Translated by Patrice Riemens This translation project is supported and facilitated by: The Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/) The Antenna Foundation, Nijmegen (http://www.antenna.nl - Dutch site) (http://www.antenna.nl/indexeng.html - english site under construction) Casa Nostra, Vogogna-Ossola, Italy # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org