
The Big Tech Healthcare Invasion Infographic
My favorite topics in teaching, other than Bayesian statistics (“of course”), are about interesting applications, ethics and impact to society. One of the things I always do is point out that many of the big technology companies are fundamentally “data” companies selling their consumer data to advertisers. Lots of gnarly ethical issues here. But the huge sleeper issue in all this is medical informatics where medical research really needs consumer lifestyle data if it wants to make major breakthroughs in the lifestyle diseases that are gradually strangling the Western economies. Even gathering lifestyle data is difficult (think diet, for instance), let alone dealing with the ethics and privacy involved.
Anyway, great piece by Jennifer Duke “You’re worth $2.54 to Facebook: Care to pay more?” in the Australian press today (SMH, The Age). We had an insightful 15 minute discussion on the phone on Friday and I managed to get a worthy quote in her article. Impressed by her broad knowledge of the topics. Good to see our journalists know their stuff.
Reuters has an extensive piece outlining details and the election influence, Cambridge Analytica CEO claims influence on U.S. election, Facebook questioned.
The Conversation seems to be surfing the media hub-bub with a dozen or more articles from the academic community in the last week or so. Here are some that caught my eye.
Some other background articles are:
An older article in the Huffington Post, Didn’t Read Facebook’s Fine Print? Here’s Exactly What It Says, and commenting on an older terms of service, but a lot still applies.
Personally, I believe online data privacy will evolve in fits and bursts, but there are a lot of technical hurdles. Online advertising, for instance, needs to turn around impressions at great speed and doesn’t have time to work through complex APIs so I suspect they will need the personal data in some form on their own servers. Sounds like a perfect application for cryptosystems to me, if it can be made fast enough. As for data harvesting, well, I expect that will go on forever.