Category Archives: DPI

Deep Packet Inspection and the Confluence of Privacy Regimes

Given how difficult I found it to find successful SSHRC-related research statements (save for through personal contacts) I wanted to post my own statement for others to look at and download if they so wish. Continue reading

Posted in DPI, Internet, ISPs, Politics, Privacy, Surveillance | 13 Comments

Privacy Advocates and Deep Packet Inspection: Vendors, ISPs, and Third-Parties

DPI vendors are routinely involved in trying to sell their product – it’s what they do – but I think what is most telling isn’t what vendors say, but what the ISPs’ representatives say. When I talked to a Bell representative recently, and asked whether it mattered to Bell that throttling BitTorrent might affect the dissemination of information, the rep’s response was “they choose that business model, and now they get to live with the consequences of choosing it” (paraphrased). Is the technology itself inherently ‘bad’? I’m not comfortable with that. Are particular uses of the technology ‘bad’? Undoubtably. Continue reading

Posted in DPI, Internet, ISPs, Privacy, Surveillance, Technology, Thoughts | 11 Comments

Deep Packet Inspection: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

In this post, I want to try to lay out where I see some of the Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) discussions. This is to clarify things in my head that I’ve been thinking through for the past couple of days and to lay out for readers some of the ‘bigger picture’ elements of the DPI discussion (as I read them). If you’ve been fervently following developments surrounding this technology, then a lot of what is below is just rehashing what you know – hopefully the summary is useful – but if you’re relatively unfamiliar with what’s been going on this might help to orient what’s been, and is being, said. Continue reading

Posted in DPI, ISPs, Privacy, Thoughts | 1 Comment

Draft: Code-Bodies and Algorithmic Voyeurism

This paper, entitled “Code-Bodies and Algorithmic Surveillance: Examining the impacts of encryption, rights of publicity, and code-specters,” is an effort to think through how voyeurism might be understood in the context of Deep Packet Inspection using the theoretical lenses of Kant and Derrida. Continue reading

Posted in DPI, Privacy, Social and Political Philosophy, Surveillance | Leave a comment
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