Contributors:
|
|
[Databases] [Recent Additions]
[Translate]
[Add a Link]
[Disclaimer]
- Electronic Privacy Information Center, 'SURFER BEWARE: PERSONAL PRIVACY AND THE INTERNET' [Search]
A review of 100 of the most frequently visited web sites on the Internet. Looks at whether sites collected personal information, had established privacy policies, made use of cookies, and allowedpeople to visit without disclosing their actual identity. June 1997
- Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) "THE COOKIES PAGE" [Search]
EPIC explains that the Internet Engineering Task Force is now considering aproposal to fix some of the problems with cookies, and provides links to these resources and to articles analysing control of cookies under US law.
- G Greenleaf, "Global Protection of Privacy in Cyberspace - Implications for the Asia-Pacific (Self-regulation, national laws and international agreements)" 1998 Internet Law Symposium, Taiwan, June 1998. [Search]
- Justice Michael Kirby, 'Privacy in Cyberspace'
(1998) University of New South Wales Law Journal Volume 21, Number 2
- Peter P. Swire & Robert E. Litan, 'None of Your Business: World Data Flows, Electronic Commerce, and the European Privacy Directive' [Search]
Full text of the book (on Brookings Institution Press)
- Publications Relevant to e-Privacy [Search]
This document indexes Roger Clarke's papers published from 1996 onwards that addressed privacy in the Internet context
- Rob Kling et al, 'INFORMATION ENTREPRENEURALISM, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES and the CONTINUING VULNERABILITY OF PRIVACY' [Search]
Rob Kling, Mark S. Ackerman, and Jonathan P. Allen December 27, 1994 (Draft 4.4). For: Computerization and Controversy: Value Conflicts and Social Choices. 2nd Ed: Rob Kling (Ed). Academic Press, 1995.
- Roger Clark, "Privacy On the Internet Threats, Countermeasures and Policy", IBC 1997 Australian Privacy Forum, Sydney, October 1997 [Search]
This paper considers privacy in the context of the Internet.
- Roger Clarke "Information Privacy On the Internet Cyberspace Invades Personal Space" Telecommunication Journal of Australia 48, (2 May/June 1998) [Search]
The paper examines the impact of the internet on the privacy of personal data.
- Roger Clarke "Platform for Privacy Preferences: A Critique" (April 1998) [Search]
Clarke situates P3P in the history of IPPs, showing which aspects of standard privacy concerns it does and does not address. He also discusses the enforcement aspects. He reaches an `open verdict' on its utility.
- Roger Clarke "Platform for Privacy Preferences: An Overview" (April 1998) [Search]
This article provides a simple explanation of the P3P protocol, and technical summaries as well.
- Roger Clarke "Smart Cards in Banking and Finance" (April 1997) 111 The Australian Banker 2 [Search]
By adding a micro-chip to conventional plastic cards, financial services organisations extend their scope and reach. By adopting and adapting too slowly, however, financial services organisations risk major losses in market-share, and even contraction or outright failure.
- Roger Clarke `Cookies' [Search]
A description of the technology, summaries of the pros and cons of cookies, and an extensive further reading list.
- Roger Clarke Chip-Based ID: Promise and Peril (International Conference on Privacy, Montreal, September 1997) [Search]
The introductory parts of Clarke's paper (down to `Threats in Chip-Based Schemes') and references therefrom, give a survey of issues involved in identification schemes.
- Roger Clarke, "Current Developments in Internet Privacy " Version of 27 August 1999, prepared for presentation at the IIR Conference on Data Protection and Information Privacy, 31 August 1999 [Search]
This document provides an overview of the current situation in the debates about the Internet and privacy.
- Roger Clarke, "Information Technology and Dataveillance" Comm. ACM 31,5, 1988 (Re-published in C. Dunlop and R. Kling (Eds.), 'Controversies in Computing', Academic Press, 1991.) [Search]
Roger Clarke has made a significant international contribution to analysis of the techniques of data surveillance - or `dataveillance' as he called it. Although this paper by Clarke predates the significance of the Internet for surveillance (1988) its analysis of the forms of dataveillance remains valuable.
- The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) "the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P)" [Search]
The Platform for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P), developed by the World Wide Web Consortium, is emerging as an industry standard providing a simple, automated way for users to gain more control over the use of personal information on Web sites they visit.
- World Wide Web Consortium - Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) Project [Search]
The Platform for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P), developed by the World Wide Web Consortium, is emerging as an industry standard providing a simple, automated way for users to gain more control over the use of personal information on Web sites they visit.
|