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Privacy protection in social media – what with the public sector`s responsibility?. Ove Skåra, Director of Communications 15. Sept. 2010. The Data Inspectorate, Norway.
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Privacy protection in social media – what with the public sector`s responsibility? Ove Skåra, Director of Communications 15. Sept. 2010 The Data Inspectorate, Norway
The biggest mistake the future scientists and computer freak does is to draw lessons from a PC at work into the homes. Such a projection does not hold, writes Leif Osvold in Oslo The Internet is a flop, a flavour-of-the month that will die out within a couple of years The Internet is a Flop And when it comes to using the Internet to acquire all types of information, I believe that it will die out by itself Today only 1% of the population uses the Internet at home, and I certainly don’t expect that number to increase substantially
The Internet is a Flop Paper is best Internet will not take off
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“-You have zero privacy anyway… • Get over it” • Scott McNealy, Sun Microsystems, 1999:
What can we possibly do about it? • Get public offices to distinguish more carefully between what they publish on the Internet and what they make available in other ways • Make greater use of meta-tags to avoid indexing and cathing • Impose a regristration and advisory arrangement so the subject is aware of the search and download • Make public agencies liable to pay compensation if personal data published on their website can be shown to have informed criminal assault • Be more critical about the types and quantities of personal data that public agencies should be allowed to compile, and what purposes such personal data can legally be used for, in the absence of the subject’s consent.