Health Care in a Post-Privacy World
Someone knows you are reading this. They know what device you are using. They know if you make it all the way to the end (which I hope you do!). They may be watching you read it, and listening to you. They know exactly where you are right now, and where you've been.
As FBI Director James Comey recently proclaimed, "there is no thing as absolute privacy in America."Director Comey was speaking about legal snooping, authorized by the courts and carried out by law enforcement agencies, but, in many ways, that may be the least of our privacy concerns.
Your phone knows where you are, all the time. Go outside and chances are you'll show up on surveillance cameras at some point. Facial recognition software can now easily identify you (e.g., Facezam), as can supposedly de-identified data.
Think about what Google knows about you. Think about what Facebook knows about you. Think about what Amazon knows about you, including anything you may have told Alexa. Think about what your mobile phone carrier or your cable/internet providers know about you.
It's pretty staggering.
We all know, in theory, that all these organizations are collecting information on us, and even that they're using it, ostensibly to "help" serve us better. Again, in theory, we've given permission for them to collect and use our information -- in some cases, to even sell or share it with other organizations, with whom we may have no other relationship.
And these are all from the "good guys" -- law enforcement agencies or well known, usually publicly traded companies we're electing to get services from. There's a whole world of hackers and cybercriminals who are after our data, for fun or for-profit, and they're pretty damn good at getting it.
And if we think things are bad now, wait until the vaunted Internet of Things (IoT) really takes hold, when virtually everything may be subject to attack.
The Pew Research Center has been following the digital privacy issue for several years, and concludes that:
- 91% think they've lost control over their personal information;
- Few have confidence that any organization will protect their personal information;
- At most only about half think they understand what happens with their information;
- Most claim to have taken actions to protect their personal information, but most also admit they'd like to do more.
- Perhaps most telling, our attitude about privacy is "it depends" -- e.g., it is OK to use their information if used to combat terrorism (or perhaps to make shopping easier).
Health Care in a Post-Privacy World was authored by Kim Bellard and first published in his blog, From a Different Perspective.... It is reprinted by Open Health News with permission from the author. The original post can be found here. |
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- Accenture
- Alexa
- Blockchain
- Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
- Cybercriminals
- cybersecurity
- Evan Schumn
- facial recognition software
- hackers
- health care data breaches
- health data breaches
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
- IBM
- Internet of Things (IoT)
- James Comey
- Johns Hopkins University Health and Medical Security Lab
- Kim Bellard
- legal snooping
- medical identify theft
- Paul Roemer
- Pew Research Center
- privacy
- Wikileaks
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