Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Sunlight alone is not a disinfectant: Consent and the futility of opening Big Data black boxes (without assistance):

Sunlight alone is not a disinfectant: Consent and the futility of opening Big Data black boxes... In our attempts to achieve privacy and reputation deliverables, advocating for service providers and other data managers to open Big Data black boxes and be more transparent about consent processes, algorithmic details, and data practice is easy. Moving from this call to meaningful forms of transparency, where the Big Data details are available, useful, and manageable is more difficult. Most challenging is moving from that difficult task of meaningful transparency to the seemingly impossible scenario of achieving, consistently and ubiquitously, meaningful forms of consent, where individuals are aware of data practices and implications, understand these realities, and agree to them as well. This commentary unpacks these concerns in the online consent context. It emphasizes that self-governance fallacy pervades current approaches to achieving digital forms of privacy, exemplified by the assertion that transparency and information access alone are enough to help individuals achieve privacy and reputation protections. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Big Data & Society SAGE

Sunlight alone is not a disinfectant: Consent and the futility of opening Big Data black boxes (without assistance):

Big Data & Society , Volume 7 (1): 1 – Jun 23, 2020

Sunlight alone is not a disinfectant: Consent and the futility of opening Big Data black boxes (without assistance):

Big Data & Society , Volume 7 (1): 1 – Jun 23, 2020

Abstract

In our attempts to achieve privacy and reputation deliverables, advocating for service providers and other data managers to open Big Data black boxes and be more transparent about consent processes, algorithmic details, and data practice is easy. Moving from this call to meaningful forms of transparency, where the Big Data details are available, useful, and manageable is more difficult. Most challenging is moving from that difficult task of meaningful transparency to the seemingly impossible scenario of achieving, consistently and ubiquitously, meaningful forms of consent, where individuals are aware of data practices and implications, understand these realities, and agree to them as well. This commentary unpacks these concerns in the online consent context. It emphasizes that self-governance fallacy pervades current approaches to achieving digital forms of privacy, exemplified by the assertion that transparency and information access alone are enough to help individuals achieve privacy and reputation protections.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/sage/sunlight-alone-is-not-a-disinfectant-consent-and-the-futility-of-VDQ08Ki0zC

References (18)

Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
Copyright © 2022 by SAGE Publications Ltd, unless otherwise noted. Manuscript content on this site is licensed under Creative Commons Licenses.
ISSN
2053-9517
eISSN
2053-9517
DOI
10.1177/2053951720935615
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In our attempts to achieve privacy and reputation deliverables, advocating for service providers and other data managers to open Big Data black boxes and be more transparent about consent processes, algorithmic details, and data practice is easy. Moving from this call to meaningful forms of transparency, where the Big Data details are available, useful, and manageable is more difficult. Most challenging is moving from that difficult task of meaningful transparency to the seemingly impossible scenario of achieving, consistently and ubiquitously, meaningful forms of consent, where individuals are aware of data practices and implications, understand these realities, and agree to them as well. This commentary unpacks these concerns in the online consent context. It emphasizes that self-governance fallacy pervades current approaches to achieving digital forms of privacy, exemplified by the assertion that transparency and information access alone are enough to help individuals achieve privacy and reputation protections.

Journal

Big Data & SocietySAGE

Published: Jun 23, 2020

Keywords: Privacy; consent; transparency; internet governance; privacy policy; information policy

There are no references for this article.