Direct Link: https://www.captechu.edu/blog/what-privacy
www.CapTechU.edu
Jason M. Pittman, Sc.D.
Dr. Jason M. Pittman is a scholar, professor, and cybersecurity
thought leader. He currently is on the full-time faculty at Capitol
Technology University. The following is part of an ongoing series on
privacy.
I think privacy must end.
I think privacy must end if we, as a species, are going to survive in
the developing Virtual Age. To illustrate why I think so, I first
outlined why privacy is in demand right now. Specifically, I indicated
that privacy creates a perceived (but false) information parity, treats information as a currency, and implies information permanency. Knowing that privacy is in demand is to know only half of the conversation, however.
The other half of the conversation is to know what constitutes
privacy. To be sure, there are numerous definitions of privacy. Stated
another way, there is no universal meaning for privacy. More
importantly, there is no universal understanding of what is privacy.
While the legal profession has much to say in this regard, I am not at
all interested in legal debate. I am also not interested in defining
privacy in a general manner.
Instead of simply defining privacy, I want to consider the question of what privacy entails.
That is, what information can we determine to be private? I think this
is straightforward if we only consider information that we possess.
However, when we consider information in a broad context or information
that someone else possesses, the question becomes somewhat more
difficult.
Modern society operates according to a narrative whereby privacy is
something that is under constant assault. Privacy is something breached,
compromised or undermined. Privacy is something you had as
opposed to have or will have. These notions imply that privacy is a
state and, moreover, a static state. I do not think the truth could be
further from the implication.
I submit that privacy is a graduated or interval construct. Graduated
and interval refer to the ability for privacy to incrementally increase
or decrease (think about the delimiter marks on a ruler or
thermometer). Moreover, I would argue that privacy is a continuum at
both the individual and collective levels. That is, personal privacy can
increase or decrease dynamically relative to various forms of
information. Further, an individual’s privacy construct can differ from
the collective. Meanwhile, the individual’s expectations and tolerance
of privacy across the cultural collective is likewise volatile.
We must also consider whether privacy can be envisioned as one
construct in a given scenario and, later, a different construct in a
differing scenario (or, perhaps even the same scenario replayed)? My
point is that proclaiming privacy to be one construct is limiting and
possibly dangerous as conceptualizing privacy as a single, static state.
Indeed, privacy could be multiple constructs simultaneously. I highly
suspect that this is closer to reality. I’m also left wondering how
privacy, if it is such a valuable facet of human consciousness, can be
so simultaneously versatile and universal at multiple levels of
resolution.
I believe the answer exists in understanding privacy as five
different information constructs: non-intrusion, seclusion, limitation,
and control, and knowing. Thus, I want to spend some time developing a
strong understanding of what privacy is as a prerequisite to our later
questions. Please, join me as I continue to explore what is privacy.
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