blinkx
  • Battle of Ideas: Privacy is Dead. Long Live Privacy?

  • 01:30:06
  • ForaTV
    • Browse
  • Expand ToolbarCollapse ToolbarClose Toolbar

According   Actually   Adoption   Affording   Anxious   Anyway   Apart   Battle   Become   Blogs   Blown   Bookmarking   Buy   Ceo   Changed   Communication   Concerns   Conference   Contexts   Control   Data   Dead   Death   Details   Dividing   Divulging   Enthusiastic   Extent   Facebook   Facilitated   Gathering   Government   Hosted   Ideas   Increasingly   Individuals   Institute   Intimate   London   Loss   Meaning   Microsystems   Monitoring   Myspace   Norm   Notions   Personal   Picture   Possibility   Privacy   Private   Protect   Public   Ready   Responsible   Scott   Seems   Sharing   Simply   Social   Sun   Surveillance   Technologies   Technology   Tesco   Transformed   Uk   Unprecedented   Via   Wall   Websites   Worry   Zero   

Battle of Ideas: Privacy is Dead. Long Live Privacy?

Battle of Ideas: Privacy is Dead. Long Live Privacy?

Battle of Ideas: Privacy is Dead. Long Live Privacy? The Institute of Ideas - London, UK Privacy is Dead. Long Live Privacy? at the 2007 Battle of Ideas conference hosted by the Institute of Ideas.New technology seems to have changed the meaning of privacy, affording individuals the possibility of sharing details of their hitherto private lives in unprecedented ways, from personal blogs to picture sharing and even 'social bookmarking'. For many of us, divulging intimate details of our private lives via social networking websites like MySpace and Facebook has become the norm. But information and communication technologies have also facilitated surveillance and data gathering by government and big businesses. While in some contexts we seem so ready to give up our privacy, in others we seem increasingly anxious to protect it.To what extent are new technologies responsible for the death of privacy? Are privacy concerns simply technophobic, or are we right to worry about a loss of control over personal information? Have new technologies and our enthusiastic adoption of them actually transformed our notions of public and private, and blown apart the wall dividing the two? Why do we worry about Tesco monitoring what we buy, when, according to Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy: 'You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it'? - IoI

ForaTV | November 8, 2007Watch more videos from ForaTV

Tags:. .changed. .personal. .public. .death. .sharing

Collapse Toolbar