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Privacy,trust and policy-making: Challenges and responses
Authors:David Wright  Serge Gutwirth  Michael Friedewald  Paul De Hert  Marc Langheinrich  Anna Moscibroda
Affiliation:1. Trilateral Research and Consulting, London, United Kingdom;2. Center for Law, Science Technology & Society Studies at the Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Brussels, Belgium;3. Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research, Karlsruhe, Germany;4. Faculty of Informatics, University of Lugano, Switzerland
Abstract:The authors contend that the emerging ubiquitous Information Society (aka ambient intelligence, pervasive computing, ubiquitous networking and so on) will raise many privacy and trust issues that are context dependent. These issues will pose many challenges for policy-makers and stakeholders because people's notions of privacy and trust are different and shifting. People's attitudes towards privacy and protecting their personal data can vary significantly according to differing circumstances. In addition, notions of privacy and trust are changing over time. The authors provide numerous examples of the challenges facing policy-makers and identify some possible responses, but they see a need for improvements in the policy-making process in order to deal more effectively with varying contexts. They also identify some useful policy-making tools. They conclude that the broad brush policies of the past are not likely to be adequate to deal with the new challenges and that we are probably entering an era that will require development of “micro-policies”. While the new technologies will pose many challenges, perhaps the biggest challenge of all will be to ensure coherence of these micro-policies.
Keywords:Ambient intelligence   Profiling   RFID   Data Protection   Privacy   Information Society Policies
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