Pendant ce temps, à Standford :
1) Blame the NSA, not Facebook and Google : Column
By Marvin Ammori on November 22, 2013
▻https://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/blog/2013/11/blame-nsa-not-facebook-and-google-column
Intéressant comme l’auteur du Center for Internet and Society (CIS)* omet complètement la question de la centralisation des services Web :
The only way to eliminate the NSA’s access to this data would be to shut down phone calls, cloud storage, web mail, maps and other services — or at least very radically hobble them. That is, the issue is much harder than privacy advocates let on, and not amenable to an easy fix.
2) Ils ont lancé un « appel à données » auprès des citoyens américains, afin de prouver la valeur des métadatas collectées dans les smartphones Android comme instrument de surveillance
What’s In Your Metadata ?
By Jonathan Mayer and Patrick Mutchler on November 13
▻https://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/blog/2013/11/what%27s-in-your-metadata
The NSA has confirmed that it collects American phone records. Defenders of the program insist it has little privacy impact and is “not surveillance.”
Like many computer scientists, we strongly disagree. Phone metadata is inherently revealing. We want to rigorously prove it—for the public, for Congress, and for the courts.
Merci #Snowden ! dont le sens éthique a directement permis (ou grandement facilité) ces études, mettant un peu plus précisément le gouvernement face à ses responsabilités.
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Founded in 2000 by Lawrence Lessig, the Center for Internet and Society (CIS) is a public interest technology law and policy program at Stanford Law School and a part of Law, Science and Technology Program at Stanford Law School.
#metadonnées #smartphones #enquéter