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Privacy is Power

Why and How You Should Take Back Control of Your Data

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An Economist Book of the Year
Every minute of every day, our data is harvested and exploited… It is time to pull the plug on the surveillance economy.
Governments and hundreds of corporations are spying on you, and everyone you know. They're not just selling your data. They're selling the power to influence you and decide for you. Even when you've explicitly asked them not to.
Reclaiming privacy is the only way we can regain control of our lives and our societies. These governments and corporations have too much power, and their power stems from us—from our data. Privacy is as collective as it is personal, and it's time to take back control.
Privacy Is Power tells you how to do exactly that. It calls for the end of the data economy and proposes concrete measures to bring that end about, offering practical solutions, both for policymakers and ordinary citizens.
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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2021
      A manifesto demanding the right to privacy in the digital realm, a right firmly in the hands of the tech giants. "If you have the latest Roomba vacuum cleaner, it is probably creating a floor plan of where you live." So writes V�liz, a professor at Oxford's Institute for Ethics in AI, who pairs the observation to a provocative, frightening thought: Imagine the possibilities if an authoritarian regime were to have "a detailed real-time map of every room and building in the world." The temptation to abuse that power would be endless. So it is with the largest tech companies, which relentlessly collect data and write algorithms that are meant to exploit your presence on the internet, and not always in obvious ways. It's not your data that's being bought and sold, she adds, but instead "the power to influence you." While it's fairly benign to be influenced to buy a certain book or laundry detergent, that influence sometimes extends to the acceptance and propagation of vicious, even dangerous political lies. The "data economy" demands resistance, in part because democracies are always on the verge of descending into authoritarian states whose leaders have intentions "that may not favor the likes of you." Such intentions are well served by "surveillance capitalism," and they lead to such well-known episodes as the influence-peddling of Cambridge Analytica in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. Other civil libertarians have mounted overlapping arguments, but V�liz writes clearly and without hyperbole. She is adamant on certain points: "stay clear of Androids," phones stuffed with pre-installed apps that send data to third parties; avoid internet-of-things products that connect online, since "you don't need a kettle or a washing machine through which you can get hacked"; and demand that government disengage from tech and make it possible for citizens to control their own data. A powerful cri de coeur for technological liberation that merits the attention of every consumer of digital services.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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