Privacy as Trust
Information Privacy for an Information Age

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Proposes a new way of thinking about information privacy that leverages law to protect disclosures in contexts of trust.

Language: English
Cover of the book Privacy as Trust

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Approximative price 110.30 €

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Privacy as Trust
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It seems like there is no such thing as privacy anymore. But the truth is that privacy is in danger only because we think about it in narrow, limited, and outdated ways. In this transformative work, Ari Ezra Waldman, leveraging the notion that we share information with others in contexts of trust, offers a roadmap for data privacy that will better protect our information in a digitized world. With case studies involving websites, online harassment, intellectual property, and social robots, Waldman shows how 'privacy as trust' can be applied in the most challenging real-world contexts to make privacy work for all of us. This book should be read by anyone concerned with reshaping the theory and practice of privacy in the modern world.
Introduction – what's at stake?; Part I. What Do We Mean By 'Privacy': 1. Privacy as freedom from; 2. Privacy as freedom for; 3. Social theories of privacy; Part II. Privacy, Sharing, and Trust: 4. Trust and sharing; 5. What does trust mean for rivacy?; Part III. A Trust-Based Approach to Privacy and Information Law: 6. The responsibilities of data collectors; 7. Previously disclosed information; 8. Trust and cyberharassment; 9. Information flow in intellectual property; 10. Trust and robots; Conclusion – the future of privacy and trust.
Ari Ezra Waldman is Professor of Law and Director of the Innovation Center for Law and Technology at New York Law School. He is a widely published and internationally sought-after scholar of data privacy, online social life, and cyber harassment. He founded the first and, to-date, only law school clinic that provides free counsel to victims of cyber harassment. His scholarship on privacy and trust won the Otto L. Walter Distinguished Writing Award in 2016. Professor Waldman also won the Best Paper Award, sponsored by the International Association of Privacy Professionals, at the 2017 Privacy Law Scholars Conference. He earned an A.B., magna cum laude, from Harvard College; a J.D. from Harvard Law School; and a Ph.D. in sociology from Columbia University.