Yearly Archives: 2010
Review: Delete – The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age
Viktor Mayer-Schonberger’s new book Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age (2009) is a powerful effort to rethink basic principles of computing that threaten humanity’s epistemological nature. In essence, he tries get impress upon us the importance of adding ‘forgetfulness’ to digital data collection process. The book is masterfully presented. It draws what are arguably correct theoretical conclusions (we need to get a lot better at deleting data to avoid significant normative, political, and social harms) while drawing absolutely devastatingly incorrect technological solutions (key: legislating ‘forgetting’ into all data formats and OSes). In what follows, I sketch the aim of the book, some highlights, and why the proposed technological solutions are dead wrong. Continue reading
Journal Publication: Moving Across the Internet
I recently had an article published through CTheory, one of the world’s leading journals of theory, technology, and culture. The article is titled “Moving Across the Internet: Code-Bodies, Code-Corpses, and Network Architecture.” The article emerged from a presentation I gave … Continue reading
Privacy Issues Strike Street View (Again)
Given that privacy law tends to be driven by actual instantiations of violation – not the possibility of a violation following the aggregation of data – it doesn’t appear that a clear violation occurs with the collection of the SSID and MAC address alone. Unencrypted data packets – including their payloads – might be another story. Continue reading
