
Privacy in Crisis
Law and Policy in Times of Extremism, Pandemics, and War
Paul Bernal(Author)
Hart Publishing
Will be published approx. on 1. April 2027
Book
Hardback
352 pages
978-1-5099-9400-7 (ISBN)
Description
Should we give up privacy to fight disease, for national security, or to help train AI systems?
Recent crises, from the Covid-19 pandemic to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, from Gaza and Afghanistan to the seemingly unstoppable rise of AI, have put privacy under severe pressure. Privacy in Crisis argues the opposite: these crises show that privacy needs to be protected even more.
Privacy in Crisis looks at vital current issues: at political manipulation and misinformation, government surveillance, racial tension, hybrid and cyberwarfare (and real wars, such as those in Ukraine and Gaza), the overwhelming power of the internet giants, and surveillance society, and how interference with privacy is key in all of them. It shows how specific crises bring many of these issues together in perfect storms of privacy invasion.
The different threats to our privacy revealed by these crises tell parallel stories and are inextricably linked. There are common themes and common technologies - the threats involve the same data, the same profiling systems and the same approaches. In many cases the systems are run or owned by the same small set of companies, controlled by the same few people. Addressing them is difficult but possible - this essential book outlines how.
Recent crises, from the Covid-19 pandemic to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, from Gaza and Afghanistan to the seemingly unstoppable rise of AI, have put privacy under severe pressure. Privacy in Crisis argues the opposite: these crises show that privacy needs to be protected even more.
Privacy in Crisis looks at vital current issues: at political manipulation and misinformation, government surveillance, racial tension, hybrid and cyberwarfare (and real wars, such as those in Ukraine and Gaza), the overwhelming power of the internet giants, and surveillance society, and how interference with privacy is key in all of them. It shows how specific crises bring many of these issues together in perfect storms of privacy invasion.
The different threats to our privacy revealed by these crises tell parallel stories and are inextricably linked. There are common themes and common technologies - the threats involve the same data, the same profiling systems and the same approaches. In many cases the systems are run or owned by the same small set of companies, controlled by the same few people. Addressing them is difficult but possible - this essential book outlines how.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5099-9400-7 (9781509994007)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul Bernal is Professor of Information Technology Law at UEA Law School, UK.
Content
1. Privacy in Crises
2. Technology and Privacy: The Developing Environment
3. Here Be Giants
4. Politics, Crises and Manipulation
5. Privacy in Pandemics
6. Privacy in War
7. Privacy and Racial Tension
8. Truth in Crisis
9. Perfect Storms
10. Regulation in Crisis
11. Reframing Privacy?
2. Technology and Privacy: The Developing Environment
3. Here Be Giants
4. Politics, Crises and Manipulation
5. Privacy in Pandemics
6. Privacy in War
7. Privacy and Racial Tension
8. Truth in Crisis
9. Perfect Storms
10. Regulation in Crisis
11. Reframing Privacy?