- From: John Carr <johnc1912@msn.com>
- Date: Tue, 3 Aug 2010 09:54:44 +0100
- To: "'Marcos Caceres'" <marcosc@opera.com>
- CC: "'Karl Dubost'" <karl+w3c@la-grange.net>, <Frederick.Hirsch@nokia.com>, <ifette@google.com>, <david.rogers@wholesaleappcommunity.com>, <public-privacy@w3.org>
If you string up a high wire across Niagara Falls you don't have to be Einstein to predict that, sooner or later, short of other measures being put in place, someone is going to try to walk across it and in the attempt they will "get hurt". It really isn't necessary to wait until someone does. The answer is either not to put the high wire up there in the first place, or don't walk away leaving it unguarded. I am 99.99% certain that if one of the big internet players could work out a way to make money from age verification they would do it in a heartbeat. I simply do not believe that the only reason it hasn't happened yet is because of noble concerns about reverse engineering to discover who is a child. And anyway the analogy given does not work. The fact that you are not signed up for a service that is limited to persons aged 18 or above does not prove that you are a child. It only proves that you haven't signed up for that service. I am a tad over 18 but hell will freeze over before I join an online gambling site or become a member of an online dating service. If you read the adjudication of the Canadian Privacy Commission in the case of Facebook you will see that, inter alia, she said the following "...............I believe something much more substantial in the way of safeguards is required. Specifically, I mean technological safeguards that will not simply forbid, but effectively prevent, developers' unauthorized access to personal information that they do not need." Not exactly on my point, but close enough I think. I am not a techie like you guys are. I am looking for help to put right what I see as a very obvious wrong. Maybe this is the wrong place to seek that help, but I've certainly enjoyed the exchange. My point is very simple: location services cross a line and it is outrageous that companies have put them out there on to the "free" internet with nominal age limits attached knowing perfectly well they have no means of enforcing those age limits. Kids will "get hurt". It is simply a question of when and how. They needn't have been, and in the shitstorm that will follow, the internet companies that have allowed these things to happen will have brought regulation a step closer. There are none so blind as those that will not see, particularly if it is dollar signs that are obscuring the view. -----Original Message----- From: public-privacy-request@w3.org [mailto:public-privacy-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Marcos Caceres Sent: 03 August 2010 06:45 To: John Carr Cc: 'Karl Dubost'; Frederick.Hirsch@nokia.com; ifette@google.com; david.rogers@wholesaleappcommunity.com; public-privacy@w3.org Subject: Re: Location services and age limit Re: Location in the news John, I'm sorry, I missed some of your presentation during the privacy meeting, but I'm really lost as to what you want or are trying to achieve - but I really do want to understand your position. You lashing out at techies and companies is not helpful and puts us all on the defensive (I'm a techie at one of those companies:(). So, lets not go down that path. Lets start again by clearly articulating what the problem is without getting frustrated. Can you please, 1. Define the problem. 2. Present some clear evidence there is a problem (particularly regarding the technology, and evidence that the technology is being used in some malicious way to undermine privacy). 3. Propose some solutions or some ideas which we may discuss - particularly cases where things have worked or failed. Kind regards, Marcos On 8/2/10 11:52 PM, John Carr wrote: > I'm not "blaming" the API. That's a bit pointless now. That's done. We > need to find a solution, but look at what happened with Buzz, look at > what is happening with StreetView, collecting data on wifi routers in > people's homes, the twists and turns of Facebook's privacy settings. > > Now tell me why I should feel confident that these guys who run these > companies and the techies they employ have any real sense of social > responsibility? We need to get past the "Hey Dude. Look what I can do. > Bet we can make a few bucks with this. Let's give it a whirl." > mentality. Some of these wizard techie things should not be launched > until the ideas are fully baked and the consequences are fully thought through. > > And by the way " It takes time, people get hurt, but it will happen." > kind of says it all. Do you feel no responsibility to try to avoid > people getting "hurt"? Or must we simply bend to the will of the new > techno Masters of the Universe? I don't think so. > > -----Original Message----- > From: public-privacy-request@w3.org > [mailto:public-privacy-request@w3.org] > On Behalf Of Karl Dubost > Sent: 02 August 2010 21:36 > To: John Carr > Cc: Frederick.Hirsch@nokia.com; marcosc@opera.com; ifette@google.com; > david.rogers@wholesaleappcommunity.com; public-privacy@w3.org > Subject: Location services and age limit Re: Location in the news > > (better subject for the mail) > > About accessing location services for people who are under 18. > > 1. Blaming the API doesn't solve the issue. > 2. Location services for children can be useful. "I'm lost in this > street far away from home, how can I go back home?" > 3. Location racking services on children might be helpful (good angels > caring) and dangerous (hunters). > > There might be different ways of addressing these. > > * There could be different set of features depending on the age of the user. > * Certification of ages online is not done and brings a ton of other > issues such as > * privacy (when I enter in a bakery somewhere I do not have to give > my age, my name or my address). > * reliability (I do not know a good system which associate a > digital identity to the person behind the computer. Identification > system in the physical world do not rely *only* on the fact that you > have an ID card but that this ID card that you are showing *here* is > physically associated to you and the identification bit is often. the > picture.) > * Change of social norms. It takes time, people get hurt, but it will > happen. > > > For me part of the answer is that carriers should make their > celltowers location database and broadcasting completely open. So > people devices could locate themselves without having to be hooked to a carrier. > > What does it give? An additional layer of opacity. A geo service could > send all the geo-tiles of a place and your location could be > calculated on the device without having to broadcast it OR You could > download maps of an area without having to rely on a live geo service. > This could also create plenty of new services, devices, applications > that people could develop (ecosystem being improved, good for the > market as > large) > BUT this would require a big shift for business people and maybe > infrastructure (weakness of this proposal). > > -- Marcos Caceres Opera Software
Received on Tuesday, 3 August 2010 08:54:56 UTC