freedom and privacy in the mobile world
DESCRIPTION
Who do you want going through your digital dirty laundry? This presentation aims to discuss the balance of freedom and privacy in the modern, mobile world.TRANSCRIPT
We are in the middle of a revolution…
Imageby:CameraShyMom
Imageby:DanielLy
… a mobile revolution.
Imageby:KivancNis
Mobile technologies allow us to expand our horizons…
Imageby:StuckinCustoms
Imageby:~jjjohn~
…Encounter new ideas…
Imageby:anuntrainedeye
… And meet people we never would have met otherwise.
Imageby:MorBCN
For many, mobile means choice, freedom.
Imageby:JonathanRashad
Imageby:Bethan
But does it also mean good health? Protection? Security?
“Looking at a computer screen up to an hour before bedtime can disrupt the way the body releases a hormone called melatonin.” This chemical regulates sleep and facilitates healing.
-The Ontarion
Imageby:NathanMakan
Imageby:MarcosVasconcelosPhotography
In Michigan, police can “snoop through smartphones at random traffic stops” without a warrant. They are able to “obtain email, Web history, SIM data, cookies, instant messages, call logs, contacts and much more from your phone.” -Popular Mechanics
“Security researchers have discovered that Apple’s iPhone keeps track of where you go – and saves every detail of it to a secret file on the device…whether or not the user agrees.”
-The Guardian
Imageby:splorp
“Security researchers have discovered that Apple’s iPhone keeps track of where you go – and saves every detail of it to a secret file on the device…whether or not the user agrees.”
-The Guardian
“[Blackberry] PIN messages that many users thought were untraceable can be logged.”
-PC World
Imageby:splorp
“Security researchers have discovered that Apple’s iPhone keeps track of where you go – and saves every detail of it to a secret file on the device…whether or not the user agrees.”
-The Guardian
Imageby:splorp
“[Blackberry] PIN messages that many users thought were untraceable can be logged.”
-PC World
An Android’s security tokens are “passed to Google servers unencrypted, a cybersnoop could easily swipe one while a consumer is surfing the web in Starbucks.”
-Fox News
Sleep may be a relatively small price to pay for the comfort of having our LCD screens within arm’s reach.
However, how much private information are we willing to share with big corporations? With strangers?
What about information about our kids?
Imageby:JorgeQuinteros
85% of American kids own a mobile phone.
-National Literacy Trust
Imageby:SpencerFinnley
48% of teenagers don’t know they can willingly broadcast their location using apps like Facebook Places or Foursquare.
-tnooz
85% of American kids own a mobile phone.
-National Literacy Trust
Imageby:SpencerFinnley
48% of teenagers don’t know they can willingly broadcast their location using apps like Facebook Places or Foursquare.
-tnooz
85% of American kids own a mobile phone.
-National Literacy Trust
How many do you think know that their mobile devices may do this automatically?
Imageby:SpencerFinnley
When we begin to access our friends, entertainment, education, even our wallets from a single device, we have to ask…
… how safe is that information?
Imageby:viZZZual.com
Who do you want going through your digital dirty laundry??
Imageby:conorwithonen
Imageby:PinkSherbetPhotography
The issue isn’t that people are more irresponsible, stupid, or mean than usual.
The world is no more cruel than it was yesterday.
The solution is simple!
Imageby:AlwaysBeCool
The solution is simple!
We need to learn the limitations of our smart devices
Imageby:AlwaysBeCool
The solution is simple!
We need to learn the limitations of our smart devices
Lobby for new laws that better regulate how information is gathered from them.
Imageby:AlwaysBeCool
The solution is simple!
We need to learn the limitations of our smart devices
Lobby for new laws that better regulate how information is gathered from them.
And, use our brains.
Imageby:AlwaysBeCool
Imageby:Immagina
Credits
All images are licensed under the Creative Commons agreement and sourced from flickr.