Privacy's Blueprint: The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies

Privacy's Blueprint: The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies

by Woodrow Hartzog
Privacy's Blueprint: The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies

Privacy's Blueprint: The Battle to Control the Design of New Technologies

by Woodrow Hartzog

Hardcover

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Overview

Every day, Internet users interact with technologies designed to undermine their privacy. Social media apps, surveillance technologies, and the Internet of Things are all built in ways that make it hard to guard personal information. And the law says this is okay because it is up to users to protect themselves—even when the odds are deliberately stacked against them.

In Privacy’s Blueprint, Woodrow Hartzog pushes back against this state of affairs, arguing that the law should require software and hardware makers to respect privacy in the design of their products. Current legal doctrine treats technology as though it were value-neutral: only the user decides whether it functions for good or ill. But this is not so. As Hartzog explains, popular digital tools are designed to expose people and manipulate users into disclosing personal information.

Against the often self-serving optimism of Silicon Valley and the inertia of tech evangelism, Hartzog contends that privacy gains will come from better rules for products, not users. The current model of regulating use fosters exploitation. Privacy’s Blueprint aims to correct this by developing the theoretical underpinnings of a new kind of privacy law responsive to the way people actually perceive and use digital technologies. The law can demand encryption. It can prohibit malicious interfaces that deceive users and leave them vulnerable. It can require safeguards against abuses of biometric surveillance. It can, in short, make the technology itself worthy of our trust.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674976009
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/09/2018
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Woodrow Hartzog is Professor of Law and Computer Science at Northeastern University School of Law and College of Computer and Information Science.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Introduction: Designing Our Privacy Away 1

Part 1 The Case for Taking Design Seriously in Privacy Law

1 Why Design Is Everything 21

2 Privacy Law's Design Gap 56

Part 2 A Design Agenda for Privacy Law

3 Privacy Values in Design 93

4 Setting Boundaries for Design 120

5 A Tool Kit for Privacy Design 157

Part 3 Applying Privacy's Blueprint

6 Social Media 197

7 Hide and Seek Technologies 230

8 The Internet of Things 260

Conclusion 276

Notes 281

Acknowledgments 355

Credits 359

Index 361

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