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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
Mon May 5, 2014, 10:35 AM May 2014

ACLU: An Important Review of Big Data

An Important Review of Big Data

By Chris Calabrese

Yesterday John Podesta, the president’s senior adviser, released a highly anticipated report addressing how the administration should tackle the challenges of big data in coming years. So how’d he do? Pretty well, actually. The report recognizes some important new realities and recommends some positive policy solutions for “a world of near-ubiquitous data collection where that data is being crunched at a speed increasingly approaching real-time.”

First, the report must be commended as one of the rarest of birds for a government report—both interesting and readable. The first few sections provide a good overview of the evolution of privacy law through the 20th century and highlight the new, and sometimes scary, world that ubiquitous data collection is bringing us....More significantly, it also addresses several areas of longstanding ACLU concern. From page 60: “Congress should amend ECPA to ensure the standard of protection for online, digital content is consistent with that afforded in the physical world.” Regular readers know we have been beating the drum on this issue for years—we’re glad to see a senior adviser to the president joining our call.

The report also shines a spotlight on the potential for discrimination in a world of big data:

There are new worries that big data technologies could be used to “digitally redline” unwanted groups, either as customers, employees, tenants, or recipients of credit. A significant finding of this report is that big data could enable new forms of discrimination and predatory practices. (Page 53)

It later adds that the federal government’s lead civil rights and consumer protection agencies should expand their technological expertise, and increase their capacity to investigate how to protect against these abuses. As we outlined when we endorsed “Civil Rights Principles for the Era of Big Data,” the potential for high-tech racial profiling and discrimination in employment, lending and insurance are very real, so attention to it from across the federal government would be welcome.

The report is particularly powerful on the issue of predictive policing. It cites a post published on this blog and states directly that “predictive analytics can now be applied to analyze a person’s individual propensity to criminal activity” (page 31). Computer “pre-crime” analysis of individuals would be a major concern for the ACLU and likely many Americans. A respected source writing about this reality will help drive discussion of whether we want police and government going down this road.

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https://www.aclu.org/blog/technology-and-liberty-national-security/important-review-big-data

Interesting that this is getting so little attention.

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