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Morality & Data
RV Mendoza edited this page Jul 31, 2014
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- Vince Speelman
- [Lorinda Brandon] (http://twitter.com/lindybrandon)
- John Pedrie
- Jeff Pryciak
- [RV Mendoza] (http://twitter.com/RVxMendoza)
- Should they have “nutrition labels” or TL;DRs?
- An OAuth-style list of permissions might be a nice way to present it
- Users are left with no alternative, as nearly every company has an overly-broad ToS to cover their own asses against legal action
- Avoid unintended consequences (many users will quickly give more info than needed without paying attention.)
- Allow users to remove themselves from your database
- Take the smallest responsible bite of data
- Periodically remind users what their terms of use meant wrt to data (in plain English) and update users when you change how you use their data
- Location history
- iOS: Settings>Privacy>Location Services>System Services>Frequent Locations
- Android: https://maps.google.com/locationhistory/
- Google Now: Creepy or Convenient? Both.
- Facebook shadow profiles
- Dead people never die
- Is owning another person's data immoral?
- Yes. It's like owning them.
- No. It's what you do with the data.
- When there is no product, you are the product.
- Is discriminating based on collected data immoral (ex: insurance companies raising / lowering rates)
- Yes. It's mean and hyper-capitalistic, especially if you're required to use the service (insurance)
- No. if the data exists, it makes sense to provide tiered service based on it
- Actuaries Have been around for hundreds of years.
- As developers, we have a great opportunity to “push hard” for data ethics and morality.
- Maybe tech companies aren't that smart about our data (ex: ordering gifts can change amazon suggestions because they can't derive context)
- Would you refuse to collect data that you found immoral? Quitting your job means your kids starve and die, but collecting the data means you could kill them later.
- The danger is in perpetuity. Once you've collected the data, your intentions and use of it can change later (for the better or for the worse)
The ToS:DR browser extension might be worth a look.