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The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance Carissa Veliz (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Institute for Ethics in AI, University of Oxford)

The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance By Carissa Veliz (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Institute for Ethics in AI, University of Oxford)

Summary

Privacy matters because it shields us from possible abuses of power. In the age of AI and the internet it is more important than ever. Carissa Veliz offers a much needed philosophical account of privacy by exploring five basic questions: What is privacy? Where does it come from? Why does it matter? What should we do about it? Where are we now?

The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance Summary

The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance by Carissa Veliz (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Institute for Ethics in AI, University of Oxford)

Privacy matters because it shields us from possible abuses of power. Human beings need privacy just as much as they need community. Our need for socialization brings with it risks and burdens which in turn give rise to the need for spaces and time away from others. To impose surveillance upon someone is an act of domination. The foundations of democracy quiver under surveillance. Given how important privacy is for individual and collective wellbeing, it is striking that it has not enjoyed a more central place in philosophy. The philosophical literature on privacy and surveillance is still very limited compared to that on justice, autonomy, or equality-and yet the former plays a role in protecting all three values. Perhaps philosophers haven't attended much to privacy because for most of the past two centuries there have been strong enough privacy norms in place and not enough invasive technologies. Privacy worked for most people most of the time, which made thinking about it unnecessary. It's when things stop working that the philosopher's attention is most easily caught-the owl of Minerva spreading its wings only with impending dusk. With the spread of machine learning, a kind of AI that often uses vast amounts of personal data, and a whole industry dedicated to the trade of personal data becoming one of the most popular business models of the 21st century, it's time for philosophy to look more closely at privacy. This book is intended to contribute to a better understanding of privacy from a philosophical point of view-what it is, what is at stake in its loss, and how it relates to other rights and values. The five parts that compose this book respond to five basic questions about privacy: Where does privacy come from? What is privacy? Why does privacy matter? What should we do about privacy? Where are we now?

About Carissa Veliz (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Institute for Ethics in AI, University of Oxford)

Carissa Veliz is an Associate Professor in Philosophy at the Institute for Ethics in AI, and a Fellow at Hertford College at the University of Oxford. She is the recipient of the 2021 Herbert A. Simon Award for Outstanding Research in Computing and Philosophy. She is the author of the highly-acclaimed Privacy Is Power (an Economist book of the year, 2020) and the editor of the Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics. She advises institutions and policymakers around the world on privacy and the ethics of AI.

Additional information

NGR9780198870173
9780198870173
0198870175
The Ethics of Privacy and Surveillance by Carissa Veliz (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, Institute for Ethics in AI, University of Oxford)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2024-01-18
240
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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