
Privacy in the Age of Big Data
Recognizing Threats, Defending Your Rights, and Protecting Your Family
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
2nd Edition
Published on 15. March 2023
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-1-5381-6782-3 (ISBN)
Description
A thorough update to a classic in the field of privacy and big data.
We have a global privacy problem. The average person provides more information about themselves to more outsiders than any time in history. Corporations, governments and even our neighbors can know where we are at times, can quickly learn our preferences and priorities and see who we meet.
The past decade has brought deep changes in the collection of our private information, the regulation of that collection, and in people's sensitivity to loss of privacy. The nascent privacy-threatening technology trends of a decade ago have blossomed into relentless data-capturing systems that police and companies have come to rely on. To address the expansion of personal data capture, entire data regulatory regimes have arisen throughout the world, with new regulations added each year.
People are more concerned, regulators are more aggressive, yet data collection continues to increase with consequences around the world. Social media use has fragmented in the past five years, spreading personal information over dozens of platforms. Even most of our new televisions have started collecting second-by-second information about our households recently, and some of those televisions can recognize the individuals watching and the devices they carry. Amazon just activated a new worldwide network using bandwidth from personal wifi of Echo devices and Ring security systems. The beat of new intrusions never seems to end.
These data trends are relentless, and yet response to the pandemic accelerated them. Rapid development of "contactless everything" became the norm. Contact tracing apps became acceptable. QR codes for everything from menus to contact information were created quickly. Businesses are faced with hybrid in office and remote workforces. More people are dependent on online and mobile technologies for food, medicine, and even human connection. And each of these contacts can be captured somewhere and logged in a file for marketing or surveillance. People want to keep their lives private, but they don't know how.
The second edition of Privacy in the Age of Big Data addresses the significant advances in data-driven technology, their intrusion deeper in our lives, the limits on data collection newly required by governments in North America and Europe, and the new security challenges of world rife with ransomware and hacking. This thoroughly updated edition demonstrates personal privacy vulnerabilities and shows ways to live a safer, more private life. Other privacy books tend to focus deeply on the evils of large tech companies or more academic and technical concerns. But Privacy in the Age of Big Data, second edition, helps regular people understand the privacy threats and vulnerabilities in their daily lives and will provide solutions for maintaining better privacy while enjoying a modern life. Unlike other books, this one shows what you can do to make a difference to understand your current digital footprint and what you need to do to claw back your privacy and secure it in the future.
While PRIVACY IN THE AGE OF BIG DATA will have cross-sectional appeal to many demographics, working adults 25-60 and CEOs and Boards of businesses are the primary demographic--young enough to know we need to do something to protect privacy and old enough to remember what happens when we haven't in the past. With down-to-earth prose and examples pulled from daily life, the writing style will attract buyers of all education levels.
We have a global privacy problem. The average person provides more information about themselves to more outsiders than any time in history. Corporations, governments and even our neighbors can know where we are at times, can quickly learn our preferences and priorities and see who we meet.
The past decade has brought deep changes in the collection of our private information, the regulation of that collection, and in people's sensitivity to loss of privacy. The nascent privacy-threatening technology trends of a decade ago have blossomed into relentless data-capturing systems that police and companies have come to rely on. To address the expansion of personal data capture, entire data regulatory regimes have arisen throughout the world, with new regulations added each year.
People are more concerned, regulators are more aggressive, yet data collection continues to increase with consequences around the world. Social media use has fragmented in the past five years, spreading personal information over dozens of platforms. Even most of our new televisions have started collecting second-by-second information about our households recently, and some of those televisions can recognize the individuals watching and the devices they carry. Amazon just activated a new worldwide network using bandwidth from personal wifi of Echo devices and Ring security systems. The beat of new intrusions never seems to end.
These data trends are relentless, and yet response to the pandemic accelerated them. Rapid development of "contactless everything" became the norm. Contact tracing apps became acceptable. QR codes for everything from menus to contact information were created quickly. Businesses are faced with hybrid in office and remote workforces. More people are dependent on online and mobile technologies for food, medicine, and even human connection. And each of these contacts can be captured somewhere and logged in a file for marketing or surveillance. People want to keep their lives private, but they don't know how.
The second edition of Privacy in the Age of Big Data addresses the significant advances in data-driven technology, their intrusion deeper in our lives, the limits on data collection newly required by governments in North America and Europe, and the new security challenges of world rife with ransomware and hacking. This thoroughly updated edition demonstrates personal privacy vulnerabilities and shows ways to live a safer, more private life. Other privacy books tend to focus deeply on the evils of large tech companies or more academic and technical concerns. But Privacy in the Age of Big Data, second edition, helps regular people understand the privacy threats and vulnerabilities in their daily lives and will provide solutions for maintaining better privacy while enjoying a modern life. Unlike other books, this one shows what you can do to make a difference to understand your current digital footprint and what you need to do to claw back your privacy and secure it in the future.
While PRIVACY IN THE AGE OF BIG DATA will have cross-sectional appeal to many demographics, working adults 25-60 and CEOs and Boards of businesses are the primary demographic--young enough to know we need to do something to protect privacy and old enough to remember what happens when we haven't in the past. With down-to-earth prose and examples pulled from daily life, the writing style will attract buyers of all education levels.
Reviews / Votes
In a timely and fascinating revision of their influential book, Privacy in the Age of Big Data, Theresa Payton and Theodore Claypoole bring us up to date on the rapid advancements of Big Data, its meteoric encroachment into our privacy, and how our daily lives are impacted now more than ever. They pull back the curtain for us and use layman's terms to help us understand the myriad of current threats to our privacy and what may lie just ahead in the future. -- Eric Sifford, CISSP-ISSEP, PCI, OSIPMore details
Edition
2nd edition
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Dimensions
Height: 222 mm
Width: 145 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
650 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-5381-6782-3 (9781538167823)
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
Other editions
Additional editions

Theresa Payton | Ted Claypoole
Privacy in the Age of Big Data
Recognizing Threats, Defending Your Rights, and Protecting Your Family
E-Book
03/2023
2nd Edition
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
€29.49
Available for download

Theresa Payton | Ted Claypoole
Privacy in the Age of Big Data
Recognizing Threats, Defending Your Rights, and Protecting Your Family
E-Book
03/2023
2nd Edition
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
€29.49
Available for download
Persons
Ted Claypoole is a partner at the law firm of Womble Bond Dickinson, practicing in Atlanta, Georgia. He has co-authored with Theresa Payton the book Protecting Your Internet Identity. He wrote the book Technology, Data and Law and also edited and co-wrote The Law of Artificial Intelligence and Smart Machines. He lives in Atlanta, GA.
Theresa Payton runs Fortalice Solutions, a globally recognized cybersecurity and business intelligence firm headquartered in Charlotte where she resides. A reality TV star from the CBS hit show, "Hunted", Payton addresses Boards, CEOs, and individuals on security and privacy matters and is regularly featured on global news media outlets discussing privacy and security issues. She lives in Charlotte, NC.
Theresa Payton runs Fortalice Solutions, a globally recognized cybersecurity and business intelligence firm headquartered in Charlotte where she resides. A reality TV star from the CBS hit show, "Hunted", Payton addresses Boards, CEOs, and individuals on security and privacy matters and is regularly featured on global news media outlets discussing privacy and security issues. She lives in Charlotte, NC.
Content
Introduction: Your Life on Technology
Chapter 1. The Intersection of Privacy, Law and Technology
Section I: Your Computer and the Internet
Chapter 2. Your Computer is Watching You
Chapter 3. How the Government Follows Your Electronic Tracks
Chapter 4. Criminals and Snoops
Chapter 5. Just Hanging Out Online
Chapter 6. The Spy in Your Pocket
Section II: Risk in the Streets
Chapter 7. Cameras Everywhere
Chapter 8. When Your Car is Just Another Computer
Chapter 9. When Your Own Body Gives You Away
Chapter 10. DNA and Health Records
Section III: Home is Where the Heart (of Surveillance) Is
Chapter 11. Home Sweet Home: Spies in Your Living Room
Chapter 12. Risks of Computer and Phone Networks
Section IV: Where Do We Go from Here?
Chapter 13. Reality Meets the Metaverse Plus
Chapter 14. Judging You by Your Data
Chapter 15. The Future of Technology and Privacy
Chapter 16. Laws and Regulations That Could Help Preserve Privacy
Index
About the Authors
Chapter 1. The Intersection of Privacy, Law and Technology
Section I: Your Computer and the Internet
Chapter 2. Your Computer is Watching You
Chapter 3. How the Government Follows Your Electronic Tracks
Chapter 4. Criminals and Snoops
Chapter 5. Just Hanging Out Online
Chapter 6. The Spy in Your Pocket
Section II: Risk in the Streets
Chapter 7. Cameras Everywhere
Chapter 8. When Your Car is Just Another Computer
Chapter 9. When Your Own Body Gives You Away
Chapter 10. DNA and Health Records
Section III: Home is Where the Heart (of Surveillance) Is
Chapter 11. Home Sweet Home: Spies in Your Living Room
Chapter 12. Risks of Computer and Phone Networks
Section IV: Where Do We Go from Here?
Chapter 13. Reality Meets the Metaverse Plus
Chapter 14. Judging You by Your Data
Chapter 15. The Future of Technology and Privacy
Chapter 16. Laws and Regulations That Could Help Preserve Privacy
Index
About the Authors