Legibility, privacy and creativity:linked data in a surveillance society


Autoria(s): Brewster, Christopher; Hine, Dougald
Contribuinte(s)

Decker, Stefan

Hendler, Jim

Kirrane, Sabrina

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

This paper looks at the issue of privacy and anonymity through the prism of Scott's concept of legibility i.e. the desire of the state to obtain an ever more accurate mapping of its domain and the actors in its domain. We argue that privacy was absent in village life in the past, and it has arisen as a temporary phenomenon arising from the lack of appropriate technology to make all life in the city legible. Cities have been the loci of creativity for the major part of human civilisation. There is something specific about the illegibility of cities which facilitates creativity and innovation. By providing the technology to catalogue and classify all objects and ideas around us, this leads to a consideration of semantic web technologies, Linked Data and the Internet of Things as unwittingly furthering this ever greater legibility. There is a danger that the over description of a domain will lead to a loss in creativity and innovation. We conclude by arguing that our prime concern must be to preserve illegibility because the survival of some form, any form, of civilisation depends upon it.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/27204/1/Linked_data_in_a_surveillance_society.pdf

Brewster, Christopher and Hine, Dougald (2014). Legibility, privacy and creativity:linked data in a surveillance society. IN: PrivOn 2013 : society, privacy and the semantic web - policy and technology. Decker, Stefan; Hendler, Jim and Kirrane, Sabrina (eds) CEUR workshop proceedings . CEUR-WS.org.

Publicador

CEUR-WS.org

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/27204/

Tipo

Book Section

PeerReviewed