- From: Ben Laurie <benl@google.com>
- Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2012 18:50:27 +0100
- To: "Jonas Hogberg K.O" <jonas.k.o.hogberg@ericsson.com>
- Cc: Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net>, Carvalho Melvin <melvincarvalho@gmail.com>, "public-philoweb@w3.org" <public-philoweb@w3.org>, "public-webid@w3.org" <public-webid@w3.org>, Oshani Seneviratne <oshani@mit.edu>
On 28 September 2012 15:26, Jonas Hogberg K.O <jonas.k.o.hogberg@ericsson.com> wrote: > At > http://blogs.kuppingercole.com/kearns/2012/09/25/in-search-of-privacy/?goback=.gde_3480266_member_168314336, > Dave Kearns writes: > > > > There is indeed a lot of confusion about the subject, but there are two key > phrases to remember when talking about privacy: > > Privacy is not anonymity > Privacy is not secrecy Quoting those out of context is not particularly helpful. But for more on why anonymity is important for privacy... http://www.links.org/?p=123 http://www.links.org/?p=124 Also the many blog posts which link to those. > > > > > > ________________________________ > > From: Henry Story [mailto:henry.story@bblfish.net] > Sent: 28 September 2012 13:49 > To: Henry Story > Cc: Carvalho Melvin; public-philoweb@w3.org; Ben Laurie; > public-webid@w3.org; Oshani Seneviratne > Subject: Re: privacy definitions -- was: WebID questions > > > > > > On 28 Sep 2012, at 13:46, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: > > > > > > On 28 Sep 2012, at 12:50, Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > On 27 September 2012 21:09, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: > > I think we have a problem with divergent understandings of what privacy > amounts to, > and we should clarify this divergence. More below. > > On 27 Sep 2012, at 14:45, Ben Laurie <benl@google.com> wrote: > >> On 27 September 2012 13:11, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: >>> >>> On 27 Sep 2012, at 13:10, Ben Laurie <benl@google.com> wrote: >>> >>>> On 27 September 2012 12:01, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: >>>>> I forgot to reply to this comment: >>>>> >>>>> On 27 Sep 2012, at 12:13, Ben Laurie <benl@google.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> The W3C does not seem to agree - >>>>>> http://www.w3.org/2011/tracking-protection/drafts/tracking-dnt.html >>>>>> claims >>>>>> that some people do not want to be correlated across sites. >>>>> >>>>> Yes. We are not saying they MUST be correlated across sites, and we >>>>> are not >>>>> removing the freedom of people who wish not to be correlated. >>>>> >>>>> When I go to a web site I don't have to click the login button. f I >>>>> click >>>>> the login button and it asks me for a certificate I don't have to >>>>> choose one >>>>> with a WebID - or choose one at all for that matter. >>>>> >>>>> The browser UI people could add a field in the certificate login >>>>> selection >>>>> box for an origin-bound-certificate perhaps. I am not sure how they >>>>> should >>>>> present this, nor what the advantages or disadvanteges of doing that >>>>> would >>>>> be, and it is outside the scope of the discussion here. >>>>> >>>>> But if I want to login with an identity I have on the web, and I want >>>>> this >>>>> to be correlated, then I don't see why that freedom should not be >>>>> available >>>>> to me. >>>>> >>>>> I am just saying that practically most people will not want to have >>>>> 10000 >>>>> identities. Certainly if we restrict ourselves to identities that they >>>>> want >>>>> to use for correlation, it seems unlikely that people can cope with >>>>> more >>>>> than a handful or find it useful. >>>> >>>> I find a standard that is not interested in helping people who want to >>>> log in _and_ have privacy to not be very interesting. >>> >>> That is stated so generally it is difficult to make much of it. You seem >>> to want Origin-bound-certificates it seems as described here: >>> >>> http://tools.ietf.org/agenda/81/slides/tls-1.pdf >>> >>> ( though the criticism of TLS certificates on slide 3 is wrong as I have >>> already explained in >>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-webid/2012Sep/0093.html ) >>> >>> I pointed out in my reply above that perhaps origin bound certificates >>> could be tied into a user experience with normal browsers and normal >>> certificates. I don't see why there should be a standard that solves both >>> problems, or why they could not work together. >>> >>> Now this still leaves you with the option of thinking that the problem >>> you really care about - secure login to one site - is the one and only truly >>> honest problem that an engineer needs to solve who is concerned about >>> privacy. Let me spend a little time disabusing you of that understandably >>> simple and appealing idea. Consider: >>> >>> 1. What kind of privacy do you get if you log into one site (say with >>> Origin-bound certificates ) and it offers everything to you: your social >>> networks, your films, your news, your search, etc... Is that really privacy? >>> >>> 2. What incentive do you have when you go to a different site, and you >>> log in there completely fresh? Let us imagine that that is the only thing >>> you CAN do when you login to a new site: perhaps linked data and WebID have >>> been made illegal in this world. So you arrive at this new site, and the >>> number of people you can interact with is inevitably less than on mega-co's >>> servers. You may find that cool. But where do you think the rest of humanity >>> is going to end up on? And what does that do to your privacy when they tweet >>> more and more where they saw you, what you told them, and in any case all >>> the communication you send them has to go through megaco's servers. >>> >>> So consider why and how you came to think that "login and privacy" were >>> the only thing to merit your attention. Also consider why you think that >>> login and identity don't equal privacy. Say you have a freedom box and I >>> have mine, and I go to your server and authenticate and post a picture. The >>> only two people who can see the picture are you and me. Where is there a >>> privacy gap there? >>> >>> I believe you are serious in your desire for privacy. And I respect that. >>> But I think by not taking into account the network effect, by not noticing >>> the many folded nature of reality, you end up working against your own >>> values, and discarding solutions that could help you achieve your aims. So I >>> do urge you to consider WebID as another tool to help create a more just and >>> less asymetric space for us to live in, where we can all enjoy greater >>> privacy and security. >> >> I've talked about many issues with WebID, why do you think privacy is >> my sole concern? > > > You said "I find a standard that is not interested in helping people who > want to log in _and_ have privacy to not be very interesting." But why would > you think that WebID does not enable privacy? > > I then put that together with your earlier statement "that some people do > not want to be correlated across sites." > Referring to a document on DO-NOT-TRACK by the W3C. It seems that you think > that being correlated across sites (in any way) is a privacy problem. > > If I put these together then it seems to me that you are thinking that a > fundamental requirement for privacy is that one not be identified across > sites in any way. You seem to exclude the possibility that I wilfully be > identifying myself across a site, as one that cannot be privacy enhancing. > Or else why would you think that WebID cannot be an option for people who > are keen on privacy? > > My understanding of privacy starts from a different intuition. A > communication between two people is private if the only people who have > access to the communication are the two people in question. One can easily > generalise to groups: a conversation between groups of people is private (to > the group) if the only people who can participate/read the information are > members of that group.... > > So now imagine that you and I and each member of this mailing list have > their own freedom box [1] . A freedom box is a one person server that serves > only the person in question. I am purposefully taking an extreme example to > make the point. Now lets imagine you put a picture of our future meeting at > TPAC in late October - I hope you will be able to come - onto your freedom > box, and tag the people who appear in that picture taken later at night in a > bar. You may not want to make it public until and unless all the members who > have appeared in the picture accept that picture to be public. So to keep it > close to our current technology, let us say you send them an e-mail with the > link to the page containing the pictures. You don't want all the people on > the web who see that URL as it passes unencrypted through the etherspace to > be able to also click on the URL and see the picture. So you add an access > control rule to your page that only allows the people who were designed in > the picture - by WebID - to access to those resources. On receiving the mail > the tagged people can click on the picture's URL, authenticate with WebID, > and see the picture. Anybody else who tried would not be able to see it: 403 > Access Forbidden. Now I would say that those pictures are protected for > privacy - they are not public, and only visible to the designated group - > and you have used WebID in the process of making sure they were kept > private. There was no third person in the loop that also saw the pictures. > Only those people you wanted to could see them. > >> >> My point was this: if your response to a desire for privacy _amongst >> many other things_ is "then don't use WebID" that seems like a >> deficiency in WebID to me, and one that makes it a lot less >> interesting to me. > > I was only saying: if you want to log into a site without using a WebID > based certificate, then don't use a WebID based certificate. But don't think > that by doing that you are guaranteeing your privacy. As I explained if > there is only one big web site to rule them all and you log into it without > webid, whatever you post there will be seen not only by the people you > wanted to have it visible to, but also by the owners of the site. In our > Freedbom Box scenario that is not the case. So this is a case of showing how > having a global identity that the user can control enhances privacy. > > > FYI: Eben Moglen defines privacy as follows: > > Which brings us I will admit to back to this question of anonymity, or > rather, personal autonomy. One of the really problematic elements in > teaching young people, at least the young people I teach, about privacy, is > that we use the word privacy to mean several quite distinct things. Privacy > means secrecy, sometimes. That is to say, the content of a message is > obscured to all but it's maker and intended recipient. Privacy means > anonymity, sometimes, that means messages are not obscured, but the points > generating and receiving those messages are obscured. And there is a third > aspect of privacy which in my classroom I call autonomy. It is the > opportunity to live a life in which the decisions that you make are > unaffected by others' access to secret or anonymous communication. > > http://www.softwarefreedom.org/events/2012/freedom-to-connect_moglen-keynote-2012.html > > Would this be an acceptable working definition for this thread? > > > > Eben Moglen makes a good case against (unnecessary) centralisation of > > information in services that you are not in control of. Note, that > sometimes > > I do want information not to be on my server: say if I get a degree from > > a university, it has more value if the university states that I have the > degree, > > than if I state it. Every person or organisation is a node in the publishing > system. > > What is problematic is the loss of autonomy that could arise by giving away > > all one's information too easily. It won't happen simply because there are > > many organisations that are legally obliged to control those processes: > > e.g. health care organisations, companies (about their employees), armies, > > police departments, universities, etc... > > > > Eben Moglen brings up the topic of autonomy but does not develop > > it far enough. This is a very interesting topic that would be worth > discussing > > on the Philosophy of the Web Community Group > > http://www.w3.org/community/philoweb/ > > > > For the purposes of the argument here, I think the simple definition of > > privacy that I gave is sufficient. For a much much more researched > > analysis, also to be developed on philoweb, see the book by Helen > > Nissenbaum "Privacy in Context" > > http://www.amazon.com/Privacy-Context-Technology-Integrity-Stanford/dp/0804752370 > > > > If we put that together with work on speech acts starting from Austin, > Searle, > > the debate with Derrida, ... and we put that together with HTTP considered > > as document acts, as I argue following Dan Conolly in my Philoweb > presentation > > around 1/3 of the way in, > > > > forgot the link: > > http://bblfish.net/tmp/2010/10/26/ > > > > then we can see how this ties in with work done by > > Oshani in her "usage restriction management" paper > > > > http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2011/Papers/IEEE-Policy-httpa/paper.pdf > > > > Essentially Nissenbaum argues that the context in which information is given > > to someone is what determines privacy rules. We need to find some mechanism > > to declare those contexts in our ReadWriteWeb servers, and Oshani has > > made some first steps in that direction. > > > > But I don't think we should - nor can we - try to solve all issues here > in this thread. > > But still it is useful to see where we are located in conceptual space here. > > > > Henry > > > > > > > > Henry > > > [1] http://freedomboxfoundation.org/ > [2] http://www.w3.org/2012/10/TPAC/ > > > > Social Web Architect > http://bblfish.net/ > >
Received on Saturday, 29 September 2012 17:50:56 UTC