Privacy at ALA 2010 Annual Conference

On the heels of a successful first-annual Choose Privacy Week, ALA’s Intellectual Freedom Committee and Committee on Legislation will present “Privacy, Libraries, and the Law” — a panel featuring three of today’s foremost privacy experts in the country…

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Recognizing Partners, Looking to the Future

As we near the close of the first-ever Choose Privacy Week, we are tremendously grateful to the many individuals and organizations that have contributed to its success. Please allow us this blog post to recognize those on the front lines of key privacy issues today…

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Privacy Programming and Public Libraries

We wanted to take a moment to highlight some of the public libraries that have told us about their fantastic Choose Privacy Week programs and activities! Here are some examples chosen from our Events page, and we hope you’ll share more events with us soon!

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  • Digital Marketing, Privacy & the Public Interest

  • Digital Marketing

    Protecting Privacy, Promoting Consumer Rights and Ensuring Corporate Accountability

     

    Perhaps the most powerful - but largely invisible - force shaping our digital media reality is the role of interactive advertising and marketing. Much of our online experience, from websites to search engines to social networks, is being shaped to better serve advertisers. Increasingly, individuals are being electronically "shadowed" online, our actions and behaviors observed, collected, and analyzed so that we can be "micro-targeted." Now a $24 billion a year industry [2008 estimates] in the U.S., with expected dramatic growth to $80 billion or more by 2011, the goal of interactive marketing is to use the awesome power of new media to deeply engage you in what is being sold: whether it's a car, a vacation, a politician or a belief. An explosion of digital technologies, such as behavioral targeting and retargeting, "immersive" rich media, and virtual reality, are being utilized to drive the market goals of the largest brand advertisers and many others.

    A major infrastructure has emerged to expand and promote the interests of this sector, including online advertising networks, digital marketing specialists, and trade lobbying groups.

    The role which online marketing and advertising plays in shaping our new media world, including at the global level, will help determine what kind of society we will create.

    • Will online advertising evolve so that everyone's privacy is truly protected?
    • Will there be only a few gatekeepers determining what editorial content should be supported in order to better serve the interests of advertising, or will we see a vibrant commercial and non-commercial marketplace for news, information, and other content necessary for a civil society?
    • Who will hold the online advertising industry accountable to the public, making its decisions transparent and part of the policy debate?
    • Will the more harmful aspects of interactive marketing - such as threats to public health - be effectively addressed?

     

    CDD's project works to keep the public informed and the online ad industry accountable.

    Promoting Public Health in the Digital Era

    Public Health

    The new media can be a boon to fostering healthy behaviors, including access to more information about drugs and lifestyle choices. But marketers also have the power to encourage the consumption of products and drugs that may be harmful to one's health. From investigating the online marketing of unhealthy food and beverages to children and teens to analyzing the threats from digital marketing of prescription and over-the-counter drugs, CDD is working to promote global public health.

    (More - Digitalads.org)

     

    read more


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  • Colbert's Word: Control-Self-Delete

  • Just a few weeks after his interview with EFF Legal Director Cindy Cohn, American hero Stephen Colbert has returned to the subject of digital rights. And in his show on Tuesday, he came up with a great solution to the problem of privacy and online social networks: Control-Self-Delete.

    The Colbert Report Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
    The Word - Control-Self-Delete
    www.colbertnation.com
    Colbert Report Full Episodes 2010 Election Fox News

    As Colbert suggests, the CEOs of Google and Facebook can be astonishingly tone deaf when it comes to the question of the privacy of their customers. As these experts in social media ought to know, the fact that a person chooses to share some information about themselves online is no indication that they prefer to share everything — nor does it indicate that control of personal data is not something they care deeply about. Study after study has shown the opposite to be true: users care about privacy, and demand control of their own data.

    We like Colbert's basic point, saved for the end of this clip: if anyone should change their behavior to address the problem of online privacy, it isn't young people who have uploaded some racy pics — it's the companies that have made themselves the guardians of our personal data.


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  • EPIC Challenge to Airport Body Scanner Program Moves Forward in Federal Court

  • The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has set a briefing schedule for EPIC v. DHS, No. 10-1157, EPIC's challenge to the airport body scanner program. EPIC has alleged that that the Department of Homeland Security has violated three federal laws (the Administrative Procedures Act, the Privacy Act, and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act) and that the body scanner search itself is unconstitutional, given what the courts have said about the permissible scope of airport screening procedures. EPIC's initial brief will be due November 1, 2010. Subsequent briefs from DHS and EPIC will be due by December 15, 2010. In earlier open government litigation against DHS, EPIC obtained evidence that the devices are designed to store and record images. For more information, see EPIC - EPIC v. DHS (Suspension of Body Scanner Program).
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  • Lawsuit filed against DHS travel surveillance

  • In the first lawsuit to challenge one of the U.S. government’s largest post-9/11 dragnet surveillance programs, the First Amendment Project (FAP) filed suit today under the Privacy Act and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) against U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the DHS division that operates the illegal “Automated Targeting System” of lifetime travel histories [...]
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  • Dan Solove: Fourth Amendment Pragmatism

  • George Washington University Law Professor and Concurring Opinions creator Dan Solove has published an article about the Fourth Amendment in the Boston College Law Review. The abstract of “Fourth Amendment Pragmatism“: In this essay, Professor Solove argues that the Fourth Amendment reasonable expectation of privacy test should be abandoned. Instead of engaging in a fruitless game [...]
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  • ‘Evil’ Eric Schmidt Debuts in Video Targeting Google Privacy

  • A creepy caricature of Google CEO Eric Schmidt drives an ice cream truck in this video produced by a consumer group targeting the search giant for its data collection practices. The video is part of a lobbying effort by Consumer Watchdog to get the government to create a so-called “Do Not Track Me” list “to prevent online companies [...]
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