The promise of privacy controls
Een gastbijdrage van Woodrow Harzog, affiliate Junior Scholar at the Center for Internet and Society en Roy H. Park, Fellow and Ph.D. Student, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Het stuk is ook te lezen op het blog van het Stanford Center for Internet and Society.
Privacy settings and other technological controls used to protect privacy have been justifiably criticized a bit lately. Danielle Citron recently blogged at Concurring Opinions about an important new study conducted by Columbia’s Michelle Madejski, Maritza Johnson and Steve Bellovin that found that Facebook’s default privacy settings fail to capture real-world expectations. The United Kingdom Government has recently indicated that browser settings alone cannot be used by Web users to give consent to being tracked online under a new EU law. The Government’s rationale for this decision was that these browser settings were not flexible enough to reflect a user’s true privacy preferences.
The general consensus seems to be that most privacy settings simply aren’t that good at protecting the actual information we consider private in a given context. I think some skepticism regarding privacy controls is warranted, particularly in light of the current technology. However, I’d like to show some support for privacy controls, or, rather, the promise of privacy controls. My hope is that that courts and lawmakers do not completely sour on recognizing privacy controls as a legitimate way to protect an Internet user’s privacy.