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The Price of Privacy

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Title: The Price of Privacy


1
The Price of Privacy
  • Rivka Ribak
  • Department of Communication
  • University of Haifa, Israel

2
Outline
  • The prevalent discourse
  • About technology
  • About globalization
  • The Israeli case research findings
  • The argument
  • Privacy is a culturally-specific notion
  • Its price is negotiated between local practices
    and global forces

3
The inevitable eyeTechnological determinism
  • Surveillance is inevitably implicated in advanced
    communication technology
  • Evidence for this link may be found in
  • The scope of academic publications on the issue
  • The growth of data protection industry
  • The recurrence of popular depictions of this link
    and its consequences

4
Big Brother comes from the USCultural
Imperialism
  • American culture is preoccupied with privacy
  • This preoccupation is built into the technology
    produced for and by it
  • Globalization consists of the spread of US
    technology, and the ideology that is embedded in
    it, to the world

5
Qualifying unidirectional determinism
  • Technology as a dialogic practice
  • Privacy is constructed at the interface of
    hardware, software and user, as they are embedded
    in cultural and political contexts, over time
  • Globalization as a dialogic practice
  • Privacy is constructed at the meeting of local
    cultures and global political-economical forces,
    in history

6
The price of privacyTwo case studies
  • Captain Internet HaAretz supplement
  • Discursive construction of privacy for/among
    Israeli surfers
  • Cross-cultural inter-generational survey
  • Privacy practices of Israeli parents and their
    adolescent children as compared to their US
    counterparts

7
Captain Internet
  • Weekly supplement, March 1997 April 2002
    (Jan. 2004 on-line edition)
  • As compared to being Wired, The Captain adopts a
    distant perspective
  • Views the internet in the historical context of
    books, radio and television
  • Is conscious of local practices that undermine
    global trends

8
The discourse of privacy
  • Growth in the number of references
  • 11 in 1998 17 20 30 in 2001
  • The pragmatic discourse, translated into a
    calculation of the price, remains

9
Privacy and culture
  • Privacy is a basic American value, 9.98
  • Were Americans, that is, were right, 9.01
  • In Israel, privacy protection means storing your
    information in the closet, 8.99

10
Privacy and technology
  • Doubtless there is nothing that concerns the
    average surfer more than the violation of his/her
    privacy, 6.01
  • Privacy is like the weather, 1.02
  • Information can be easily protected using
    software, 6.01

11
Privacy and the price
  • You have zero privacy anyway, get over it
    (McNealy).
  • Birnhak, 4.02
  • If the price of light is a little less privacy,
    then I am willing to pay it.
  • Rafaeli, 2.02
  • If everybody would enter using nicknames, it
    would ruin it.
  • Unger, 4.02

12
The surveyIn collaboration with Prof. Joe Turow
  • Questionnaire 1,000 adults, 300 adolescents, US,
    January 2000
  • http//www.appcpenn.org/04_info_society/family/FAM
    ILY.HTM
  • Questions translated into Hebrew
  • Questionnaire 1,000 adults, 300 children,
    Israel, January 2001
  • General perceptions and use patterns
  • Ideas about privacy and practices of information
    exposure

13
Privacy findingsCross-cultural resemblance
  • Is it OK for a teenager to answer questions like
    these on a web site?
  • Israelis tend to agree more BUT
  • For most items, no more than 40 of the parents
    in both cultures agree that their children will
    expose information
  • Few parents in either culture are willing to
    expose this information themselves (20 of the
    Israelis, 24 in the US)

14
Privacy findingsDifferences in the concern
  • My concern about outsiders learning sensitive
    information has increased since we've gone
    online 37, 60
  • I am nervous about web sites having information
    about me 52, 72
  • When I go to a web site, it collects information
    about me even if I do not register 31, 54

15
Privacy findingsDifferences in loci of
responsibility
  • Teenagers should have to get their parents
    consent before giving out information online
    80, 96
  • Agree strongly 43, 84
  • I should have a legal right to know everything
    that a web site knows about me 71, 95 (43,
    88)
  • I look to see if a web site has a privacy policy
    before answering any questions 46, 72 (18,
    53)

16
Privacy findingsDifferences in experience
  • Have any of your children ever given out
    information he or she shouldnt to web sites?
    47, 10
  • Do you currently use an internet monitor on your
    home computer? 4, 19
  • Have you heard of an internet monitor before?
    33, 78
  • If someone offered to help you put an internet
    monitor for free, would you want it? 43, 82

17
Findings Access
  • Have you personally ever gone on-line? 64, 94
  • No significant differences between parents who do
    and do not surf
  • Abilities to go on-line similar
  • Expert advanced 26, 30
  • Intermediate beginner 64, 66
  • I often worry that I wont be able to explore the
    web with my children as well as other parents do
    48, 26

18
FindingsDifferences in enthusiasm
  • Access to the internet at home helps my children
    with their school work 17, 86
  • Online, my children discover fascinating, useful
    things 10, 85
  • The internet is a safe place for my children to
    spend time 25, 51

19
FindingsDifferences in concern
  • Going online too often might lead children to
    become isolated from other people 31, 59
  • I am concerned that my children might view
    sexually explicit images on the internet 28,
    72
  • View violent images 31, 62
  • I am concerned that children give out personal
    information when visiting web sites or chat
    rooms 24, 74

20
Findings Practice
  • How often have you read a privacy policy on the
    web? 25, 60
  • Have you ever bought anything over the internet?
    30, 53

21
ConclusionCross-cultural differences
  • Cross-cultural differences in
  • Appreciating the promise and the threat of the
    web
  • Patterns of use
  • The meaning of privacy
  • THUS, technology does not determine (the price
    of) privacy

22
ConclusionComplicated interrelationships
  • Israeli parents the kids are responsible
  • US parents tripartite responsibilityparents,
    state, suppliers
  • Israeli parents mellow
  • US parents enthusiastic, concerned
  • Both resent excessive exposure
  • THUS Globalization works in many levels and
    directions

23
References, links, contact
  • Internet power and social context A
    globalization approach to Web privacy concerns
    Rivka Ribak, Joseph Turow. Journal of
    Broadcasting Electronic Media. Washington Sep
    2003. Vol. 47, Iss. 3  pg. 328
  • http//www.hevra.haifa.ac.il/com/faculty-panorama/
    rivki.htm
  • Video-conference lecture by Prof. Joseph Turow,
    Annenberg School for Communication, University of
    Pennsylvania Americans and internet privacy,
    sponsored by CRI, Sept 26, 2003
  • rribak_at_research.haifa.ac.il

24
Thank You Toda
  • rribak_at_research.haifa.ac.il
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