diminishing privacy hasn't stopped us from being increasingly digital

24
Diminishing Privacy Hasn’t Stopped Us From Becoming Increasingly Digital Presentation by Vincent Li Image: (mothy muza via Unsplash

Upload: wensen-li

Post on 11-Aug-2015

105 views

Category:

Technology


8 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Diminishing  Privacy  Hasn’t  Stopped  Us  From  Becoming  

Increasingly  Digital  

Presentation  by  Vincent  Li  

Image:  (mothy  muza  via  Unsplash  

Page 2: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

 EVERYTHING  

Image:  Alex  Wong  via  Unsplash  

Page 3: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

They know where we are

Image:  Sylwia  Bartyzel  via  Unsplash  

 -­‐  Elizabeth  Dwoskin  [1]  

Page 4: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

What we’re wearing

Image:  Karolina  Grabowska  via  Kamboopics  

-­‐  Jennifer  Golbeck  [2]  

Page 5: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

What we’re eating

Image:  Leeroy  via  Lifeofpix  

 -­‐  Elizabeth  Dwoskin  [1]  

Page 6: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

How is the world reacting to this new intimacy?

Image:  Jacob  BoLer  via  Flickr  

Page 7: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Only of people surveyed would be willing to trade their private information for a more convenient online experience.

Image:  Brad  Higham  via  Flickr  

- Jacob Davidson, TIME [3]

Page 8: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

61% of adults disagree with personal data collection for more efficient online service.

Image:  Giuseppe  Mil  via  Flickr  

- Pew Research Center [4]

Page 9: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Image:  lifeofpix  

Page 10: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

80% of social media users say they are concerned about third parties accessing the data they share on these sites��� – Pew Research Center [4]

Image:  Jason  Howie  via  Flickr  

Page 11: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Yet of Internet users opt to use their facebook,  twitter  or  Google  account credentials to log into

third party sites. - Hayley Tsukayama, Washington Post [5]

Image:  Chris(aan  Colen  via  Flickr  

Page 12: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

25% of all Facebook users don’t bother with privacy settings.

Image:  Dimitris  Kalogeropoylos    

-­‐  Business  Insider  [6]  

Page 13: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Privacy hasn’t stopped us from spending hours everyday day online. [9]

Image:  edar  via  Pixabay  

Page 14: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

of all data in the world has been generated in the last two years.�- sciencedaily ,[7]

Image:  Wonderlane  via  Flickr  

90%

Page 15: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

By 2020, there will be 30 billion devices connected to the

Internet

Image:  John  Fowler  via  Flickr  

-­‐  ABI  Research  [8]  

Page 16: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Despite  diminishing  privacy,  we  are  

sharing  and  uploading  more  

information  than  ever.  

Image:  Jay  Wennington  via  Unsplash  

Page 17: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

At the same time, we have also become dependent on technology. – Erin Anderssen, Globe and Mail [9]

Image:  Jan  Vasek  via  Jeshoots  

Page 18: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

We are already living in a world where complete privacy is no longer possible.

Image:  Yohann  Aberkanne  via  Flickr    

Page 19: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

“By 2025, many of the issues, behaviours, and information we consider to be private

today will not be so.” - Gil de Zuniga [10]

Image:  Moyan  Brenn  via  Flickr  

Page 20: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Instead  of  BLAMING  PRIVACY,  

Image:  Ben  Grey  via  Flickr  

we  must  take  RESPONSIBILITY  for  our  digital  literacy  and  presence.    

Page 21: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

“We need to take steps to actively manage our privacy online, deciding both what to share and with whom to

share it. “ – Matthew Johnson, Media Smarts [11]

Image:  Ben  Grey  via  Flickr  

Page 22: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

We may not be able to determine our

digital privacy

Image:  heitere_fahne  via  Flickr  

Page 23: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

BUT WE CAN DEFINITELY CONTROL

OUR DIGITAL FOOTPRINT.

Image:  Emilian  Robert  Vicol  via  Flickr  

Page 24: Diminishing Privacy Hasn't Stopped Us From Being Increasingly Digital

Sources:  

1.  Dwoskin,  Elizabeth.  "Where  Were  You  3  Minutes  Ago?  Your  Apps  Know."  Wall  Street  Journal.  Dow  Jones  &  Company,  Inc.,  23  Mar.  2015.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

2.  Golbeck,  Jennifer.  "This  App  Tracks  You  While  You  Shop."  Slate.  The  Slate  Group,  28  Jan.  2014.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

3.  Davidson,  Jacob.  "A  Majority  Says  They  Prefer  Online  Privacy  Over  Convenience.  But  They're  Lying."  Time.  Time  Inc.,  24  June  2014.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

4.  Madden,  Mary.  "Public  Percep(ons  of  Privacy  and  Security  in  the  Post-­‐Snowden  Era."  Pew  Research  Centers  Internet  American  Life  Project  RSS.  Pew  Research  Center,  12  Nov.  2014.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

5.  Tsukayama,  Hayley.  "People  Care  More  about  Convenience  than  Privacy  Online."  Washington  Post.  The  Washington  Post,  7  Oct.  2014.  Web.  12  June  2015.  

6.  Smith,  Cooper.  "10  Social  Media  Sta(s(cs  That  Should  Shape  Your  Social  Strategy."  Business  Insider.  Business  Insider,  Inc,  19  July  2013.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

7.  SINTEF.  "Big  Data,  for  beLer  or  worse:  90%  of  world's  data  generated  over  last  two  years."  ScienceDaily.  ScienceDaily,  22  May  2013.  

8.  Arlen,  Gary.  "The  internet  of  things:  looking  ahead  to  an  interconnected  world."  Mul(channel  News  24  Feb.  2014:  10+.  Academic  OneFile.  Web.  10  June  2015.    

9.  Anderssen,  Erin.  "Digital  Overload:  How  We  Are  Seduced  by  Distrac(on."  The  Globe  and  Mail.  Phillip  Crawley,  29  Mar.  2014.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

10.  Rainie,  Lee.  "The  Future  of  Privacy."  Pew  Research  Center  Internet  Science  Tech  RSS.  Pew  Research  Center,  18  Dec.  2014.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

11.  Johnson,  MaLhew.  "Use,  Understand  &  Create:  Towards  a  Comprehensive  Canadian  Digital  Literacy  Curriculum."  Use,  Understand  &  Create:  Towards  a  Comprehensive  Canadian  Digital  Literacy  Curriculum.  Media  Smarts,  31  Mar.  2015.  Web.  10  June  2015.  

Image:  Craig  Garner  via  Unsplash