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4 - Designing Data-Extractive Technologies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2021

Ari Ezra Waldman
Affiliation:
Northeastern University, Boston
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Summary

Through a long campaign to inculcate corporate-friendly discourses about privacy, the information industry tilted our legal consciousness away from privacy and enlisted even those employees who see themselves as privacy advocates in their data-extractive missions. This softened the discursive ground on which we think and talk about privacy and weakened the privacy laws we manage to pass. Technology companies then took advantage of public-private partnerships explicitly built into those privacy laws to undermine their effectiveness. They used coercive bureaucracies and took advantage of power asymmetries to develop compliance programs that reoriented and recast privacy laws in ways that served their surveillant interests. As a result, the information industry undermined the institutions that are supposed to protect our privacy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Industry Unbound
The Inside Story of Privacy, Data, and Corporate Power
, pp. 161 - 209
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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