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A day in the digital life: a preliminary sousveillance study

Fletcher, G; Griffiths, M; Kutar, M

Authors



Abstract

A decade ago, Castells argued that most surveillance would have no directly damaging consequences. He proposed that what should be of more concern were the unpredictable consequences of our over-exposed lives, the lack of explicit rules for on-line behaviour and how this then was interpreted by a ‘multitude of little sisters’ who process and store this information, forever (Castells 2001:180). A decade later, these conjectures are still valid but are now at a critical level as individuals passively volunteer personal information while government and commercial organisations aggressively amass these snippets into correlated data. As boundaries between on-line and off-line blur, and geo-locative applications grow in popularity, we echo Castells by asking, what will be, and what are, the privacy implications of existing in a technologically saturated environment? The human data trail now begins prior to conception and continues after death. We aim to develop a methodology to enable us to quantify this trail and to examine the impact that such amassment of data has on society, communities, and personal identities within the UK. The reality is that the digital footprint is a significant research challenge to identify and then quantify. There is a critical need to capture relevant activities in a holistic and interconnected manner in order to enable understanding of the societal implications. We describe a preliminary study which will be used as a starting point to develop appropriate methods for quantification and analysis of the 21st century digital footprint.

Citation

Fletcher, G., Griffiths, M., & Kutar, M. (2011, September). A day in the digital life: a preliminary sousveillance study. Presented at A Decade in Internet Time Symposium on the Dynamics of the Internet and Society, University of Oxford

Presentation Conference Type Other
Conference Name A Decade in Internet Time Symposium on the Dynamics of the Internet and Society
Conference Location University of Oxford
Start Date Sep 21, 2011
End Date Sep 24, 2011
Publication Date Sep 11, 2011
Deposit Date Nov 30, 2011
Publicly Available Date Nov 30, 2011
Keywords Privacy, digital footprint, identity, surveillance, sousveillance, digital identity
Publisher URL http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1923629
Additional Information Access Information : This paper is also available in SSRN (SSRN has again been named the Number 1 Open Access Repository in the World (for July, 2011) by the Ranking Web of World Repositories, repeating our #1 Ranking from January, 2011).
Event Type : Other
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