Network World – Two weeks ago I contended that “Freedom and privacy, in any meaningful sense, are dead” and discussed the two types of privacy, “factual” privacy, which concerns “static” data such as your age and cholesterol level, and “lifestream” privacy which is the realtime data about things such as where you go and who you talk to.
We all know that our factual privacy is in tatters with every business and government agency that has any interest being capable of finding out whatever it needs to know about us, the law not withstanding. As for the erosion of our lifestream privacy, well, that’s somewhat new but even more insidious with most online businesses collecting, analyzing, and retaining insane amounts of data about where we virtually go and what we do.
Now, just consider the consequences of relating our factual data with our lifestream data. Not only could we be easily tracked but our online experience could be tailored, in real time, to have an effect someone else wants whether it’s for us to be more receptive to a political or commercial message or primed to purchase.
In last week’s column I segued into a discussion about online anonymity, which can protect your lifestream privacy and observed that you can achieve this if you’re technical enough to use an anonymizing service such as the Tor Network (unless “they” are really out to get you in which case all bets are off).
I ended by pointing out that there is another side of anonymity to consider: Pseudonyms, also called “handles”, aliases, nicknames, or my favorite, “nyms”. Some people argue nyms are a bad thing because they enable dissembling and inauthenticity while others argue that they are essential in preserving the freedoms of people who would otherwise be oppressed.
If you’ve been following the rollout of Google’s Google+ social networking service you may have seen Google’s policy regarding the names which demands that your account uses your “real” name.
Google’s argument for this policy is about as disingenuous as it gets, contending “this makes connecting with people on the web more like connecting with people in the real world … so that the people you want to connect with can find you.” Surrrre.
Of course, what counts as a “real” name in the real world is more than a little tricky when you consider unconventional spellings and foreign names. Not unexpectedly, Google blew off its own foot a few weeks ago when it canned several thousand accounts for what Google saw as violations of their policy. Many of these were names that Google simply didn’t understand.
Article source: http://rss.computerworld.com/~r/computerworld/s/feed/topic/17/~3/ylfMhT3DHJc/No_nyms_equals_evil
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