Privacy and the Internet of Things by 978-1-4919-3282-7
Author:978-1-4919-3282-7
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Published: 2016-10-12T04:00:00+00:00
30 Rule, J. et al. 1983. Documentary Identification and Mass Surveillance in the United States. Social Problems 31(2):222-234. Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/800214; Wood, D. and Ball, K. (eds.) 2006. A Report on the Surveillance Society: Public Discussion Document. Wilmslow: Office of the Information Commissioner. Available at http://bit.ly/2dweqHd.
31 See footnote 11.
32 Johnstone, C. 2010. Cell phones show human movement predictable 93% of the time. Arstechnica 24 Feb. Available at http://bit.ly/2cWVgIP.
33 Adapted from Blumberg, A. and Eckersley, P. 2009. On Locational Privacy and How to Avoid Losing it Forever. Electronic Frontier Foundation. Available at https://www.eff.org/wp/locational-privacy.
34 For background on “privacy in public,” see Nissenbaum, H. 1997. Toward an Approach to Privacy in Public: Challenges of Information Technology. Ethics & Behavior 7(3):207-219. For the American legal perspective, see Reidenberg, J. 2014. Privacy in Public. Available at http://bit.ly/2d3vVOl. For a European perspective, see Edwards, L. and Urquhart, L. 2016. Privacy in Public Spaces: What Expectations of Privacy Do We Have in Social Media Intelligence? Available at http://bit.ly/2dm5NQI.
35 See footnote 22.
36 See COPPA FAQ, http://bit.ly/2cwmxPc.
37 Recital 38, General Data Protection Regulation. Available at http://bit.ly/2cWWLXq.
38 See http://bit.ly/2cWWtQl.
39 However, there is at least one report of “consumer-grade” medical information being used in an emergency medical context. See Jardin, X. 2016. Emergency room doctors used a patient’s Fitbit to determine how to save his life. boingboing 7 Apr 2016. Available at http://bit.ly/2ddVQDs.
40 Patterson, H. 2013. Contextual Expectations of Privacy in Self-Generated Health Information Flows (p. 2). TPRC 41: The 41st Research Conference on Communication, Information and Internet Policy. Available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2242144.
41 For an in-depth explanation of both the lack of HIPAA protections for wearables and weak governance generally, see footnote 40, pp. 16-20.
42 Ackerman, L. 2013. Mobile Health and Fitness Applications and Information Privacy. Available at http://bit.ly/2dhGc89.
43 Peyton, A. 2016. A Litigator’s Guide to the Internet of Things. Richmond Journal of Law & Technology 22(3):9-28. Available at http://bit.ly/2dtHe0f.
44 Olson, P. 2014. Fitbit Data Now Being Used in the Courtroom. Forbes. Available at http://bit.ly/2dm7z4A.
45 Crawford, K. 2014. When Fitbit is the Expert Witness. The Atlantic. Available at http://theatln.tc/2cwn43M.
46 Peppet, S. 2014. Regulating the Internet of Things: First Steps Toward Managing Discrimination, Privacy, Security, and Consent. Texas Law Review 93(1):87-176. Available at http://bit.ly/2d0mmC7.
47 See footnote 22.
48 Hoofnagle, C. 2013. How the Fair Credit Reporting Act Regulates Big Data. Future of Privacy Forum Workshop on Big Data and Privacy: Making Ends Meet. Available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2432955.
49 White House. 2012. Consumer Data Privacy in a Networked World. Available at http://bit.ly/2dl84vh.
50 White House. 2015. Administration Discussion Draft: Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights Act. Available at http://bit.ly/2dm7UUJ.
51 See the Center for Democracy and Technology’s “Analysis of the Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights Act,” available at http://bit.ly/2ddezv5.
52 Soltani, A. 2015. What’s the security shelf-life of IoT? Tech@FTC. Available at http://bit.ly/2dtGOqI.
53 http://goodnightlamp.com/.
54 Comment made during presentation at Internet of Things Forum 2015, Cambridge, UK.
55 See Matwyshyn, A. 2009. Introduction. In Matwyshyn, M. (ed.), Harboring Data: Information Security, Law, and the Corporation (pp. 3-18). Stanford: Stanford Law Books.
56 Greenwald, G. et al. 2013. Microsoft handed the NSA access to encrypted messages.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Effective Threat Investigation for SOC Analysts by Yahia Mostafa;(6620)
Practical Memory Forensics by Svetlana Ostrovskaya & Oleg Skulkin(6345)
Machine Learning Security Principles by John Paul Mueller(6310)
Attacking and Exploiting Modern Web Applications by Simone Onofri & Donato Onofri(5985)
Operationalizing Threat Intelligence by Kyle Wilhoit & Joseph Opacki(5944)
Solidity Programming Essentials by Ritesh Modi(4062)
Microsoft 365 Security, Compliance, and Identity Administration by Peter Rising(3704)
Operationalizing Threat Intelligence by Joseph Opacki Kyle Wilhoit(3431)
Mastering Python for Networking and Security by José Manuel Ortega(3359)
Future Crimes by Marc Goodman(3351)
Mastering Azure Security by Mustafa Toroman and Tom Janetscheck(3337)
Blockchain Basics by Daniel Drescher(3308)
Learn Computer Forensics - Second Edition by William Oettinger(3190)
Incident Response with Threat Intelligence by Roberto Martínez(2919)
Mobile App Reverse Engineering by Abhinav Mishra(2889)
Mastering Bitcoin: Programming the Open Blockchain by Andreas M. Antonopoulos(2873)
The Code Book by Simon Singh(2832)
Building a Next-Gen SOC with IBM QRadar: Accelerate your security operations and detect cyber threats effectively by Ashish M Kothekar(2801)
From CIA to APT: An Introduction to Cyber Security by Edward G. Amoroso & Matthew E. Amoroso(2785)
