Felix Stalder on Wed, 18 Mar 2020 10:34:21 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Should use mobile phone data to monitor public health efforts? |
Here in Austria, and in many other places as well, restrictions on personal mobility are quite severe. At the moment, we are told to stay at home, with exceptions only for a) going to work (where remote work is not possible), b) shopping for necessities (food, medicines, cigarettes, mobile phones) c) helping others do b) and going for walks (alone or with people with whom one shares the apartment). A1, the largest mobile phone carrier, is providing data to public authorities in an effort to monitor these restrictions (contact tracing might come later). This is quite unprecedented and most people who care about data privacy are rather uneasy about it, for very obvious reasons. But I think we need to think beyond the classic surveillance / privacy dichotomy, because, clearly, social network analysis is what you want to do in order to trace the spread of a virus and fine-tune mechanism for social distancing. The traditional methods of calling up all people an infected person remembers having had contact over the preceding week is not very effective and doesn't scale. So, is there a possibility to use this data without it turning it into an authoritarian power grab? I think there is, under the following guidelines: - Data needs to be deleted after immediate purpose of the analysis has been achieved. - The analysis needs to be restricted to questions developed by an external team. So, no fishing simple because the data is now available. Mission creep very often a problem. - Questions, methods and results of the analysis need to be published after the fact. This will allow public appraisal of the legitimacy of the program. - Data needs to be made available to at least two teams that are completely independent from one another. This will allow for the cross-examination of the quality of the different approaches. If we manage to develop such a framework, which both acknowledges the public health crises AND the democratic character of our societies, then we might have created something that will be very useful for other big data question that will inevitably come up in the future. Is it likely that we manage to enact these? No. But simply calling for the protection of personal privacy, or accepting the general state of emergency, will be even worse. -- | |||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com | | Open PGP | http://felix.openflows.com/pgp.txt | --===============6835030780368680459== Content-Type: message/rfc822 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: confirm 075b19f4574ebfa0493b86513b1eafeb3aaa259d Sender: nettime-l-request@mail.kein.org From: nettime-l-request@mail.kein.org Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2020 10:20:14 +0100 Message-ID: <mailman.1305.1584523214.54339.nettime-l@mail.kein.org> If you reply to this message, keeping the Subject: header intact, Mailman will discard the held message. Do this if the message is spam. If you reply to this message and include an Approved: header with the list password in it, the message will be approved for posting to the list. The Approved: header can also appear in the first line of the body of the reply. --===============6835030780368680459==-- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: