[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CfP Cyber-surveillance in Everyday Life: An International Workshop, Toronto (Canada), 12-15 May 2011
Thu Sep 09 10:05:37 GMT 2010
Call for Participation
Deadline for abstract : October 1st, 2010
Cyber-Surveillance in Everyday
Life: An international workshop
May 12-15, 2011, University of Toronto,
Canada
Digitally mediated surveillance (DMS) is an
increasingly prevalent, but still largely invisible, aspect of daily
life. As we work, play and negotiate public and private spaces, on-line
and off, we produce a growing stream of personal digital data of interest
to unseen others. CCTV cameras hosted by private and public actors survey
and record our movements in public space, as well as in the workplace.
Corporate interests track our behaviour as we navigate both social and
transactional cyberspaces, data mining our digital doubles and packaging
users as commodities for sale to the highest bidder. Governments continue
to collect personal information on-line with unclear guidelines for
retention and use, while law enforcement increasingly use internet
technology to monitor not only criminals but activists and political
dissidents as well, with worrisome implications for democracy.
This international workshop brings together
researchers, advocates, activists and artists working on the many aspects
of cyber-surveillance, particularly as it pervades and mediates social
life. This workshop will appeal to those interested in the surveillance
aspects of topics such as the following, especially as they raise broader
themes and issues that characterize the cyber-surveillance terrain more
widely:
- social networking (practices &
platforms)
- search engines
- behavioural advertising/targeted marketing
- monitoring and analysis techniques (facial
recognition, RFID, video analytics, data mining)
- Internet surveillance (deep packet
inspection, backbone intercepts)
- resistance (actors, practices,
technologies)
A central concern is to better understand DMS
practices, making them more publicly visible and democratically
accountable. To do so, we must comprehend what constitutes DMS,
delineating parameters for research and analysis. We must further explore
the way citizens and consumers experience, engage with and respond to
digitally mediated surveillance. Finally, we must develop alliances,
responses and counterstrategies to deal with the ongoing creep of
digitally mediated surveillance in everyday life.
The workshop adopts a novel structure, mainly
comprising a series of themed panels organized to address compelling
questions arising around digitally mediated surveillance that cut across
the topics listed above. Some illustrative examples:
- We regularly hear about
‘cyber-surveillance’, ‘cyber-security’, and ‘cyber-threats’. What
constitutes cyber-surveillance, and what are the empirical and
theoretical difficulties in establishing a practical understanding of
cyber-surveillance? Is the enterprise of developing a definition useful,
or condemned to analytic confusion?
- What are the motives and strategies of key
DMS actors (e.g. surveillance equipment/systems/ strategy/”solutions”
providers; police/law enforcement/security agencies; data aggregation
brokers; digital infrastructure providers); oversight/regulatory/data
protection agencies; civil society organizations, and user/citizens?
- What are the relationships among key DMS
actors (e.g. between social networking site providers)? Between marketers
(e.g. Facebook and DoubleClick)? Between digital infrastructure providers
and law enforcement (e.g. lawful access)?
- What business models are enterprises
pursuing that promote DMS in a variety of areas, including social
networking, location tracking, ID’d transactions etc. What can we expect
of DMS in the coming years? What new risks and opportunities are likely?
- What do people know about the DMS practices
and risks they are exposed to in everyday life? What are people’s
attitudes to these practices and risks?
- What are the politics of DMS; who is
active? What are their primary interests, what are the possible lines of
contention and prospective alliances? What are the promising intervention
points and alliances that can promote a more democratically accountable
surveillance?
- What is the relationship between DMS and
privacy? Are privacy policies legitimating DMS? Is a re-evaluation of
traditional information privacy principles required in light of new and
emergent online practices, such as social networking and others?
- Do deep packet inspection and other
surveillance techniques and practices of internet service providers (ISP)
threaten personal privacy?
- How do new technical configurations promote
surveillance and challenge privacy? For example, do cloud computing
applications pose a greater threat to personal privacy than the
client/server model? How do mobile devices and geo-location promote
surveillance of individuals?
- How do the multiple jurisdictions of
internet data storage and exchange affect the application of
national/international data protection laws?
- What is the role of advocacy/activist
movements in challenging cyber-surveillance?
In conjunction with the workshop there will be
a combination of public events on the theme of cyber-surveillance in
everyday life:
- poster session, for presenting and
discussing provocative ideas and works in progress
- public lecture or debate
- art exhibition/installation(s)
We invite 500 word abstracts of research
papers, position statements, short presentations, works in progress,
posters, demonstrations, installations. Each abstract should:
- address explicitly one or more “burning
questions” related to digitally-mediated surveillance in everyday life,
such as those mentioned above.
- indicate the form of intended contribution
(i.e. research paper, position statement, short presentation, work in
progress, poster, demonstration, installation)
The workshop will consist of about 40
participants, at least half of whom will be presenters listed on the
published program. Funds will be available to support the participation
of representatives of civil society organizations.
Accepted research paper authors will be invited
to submit a full paper (~6000 words) for presentation and discussion in a
multi-party panel session. All accepted submissions will be posted
publicly. A selection of papers will be invited for revision and academic
publication in a special issue of an open-access, refereed journal such
as Surveillance and Society.
In order to facilitate a more holistic
conversation, one that reaches beyond academia, we also invite critical
position statements, short presentations, works-in-progress, interactive
demonstrations, and artistic interpretations of the meaning and import of
cyber-surveillance in everyday life. These will be included in the panel
sessions or grouped by theme in concurrent ‘birds-of-a-feather’ sessions
designed to tease out, more interactively and informally, emergent
questions, problems, ideas and future directions. This BoF track is meant
to be flexible and contemporary, welcoming a variety of genres.
Instructions for making submissions will be
available on the
workshop
website by Sept 1.
See also an accompanying
Call for Annotated Bibliographies, aimed at providing background
materials useful to workshop participants as well as more widely.
Timeline:
2010:
Oct. 1: Abstracts (500 words) for
research papers, position statements, and other ‘birds-of-a-feather’
submissions
Nov. 15: Notification to authors of accepted
research papers, position statements, etc. Abstracts posted to web.
2011:
Feb. 1: Abstracts (500 words) for
posters
Mar. 1: Notification to authors of accepted
posters.
Apr. 1: Full research papers (5-6000 words)
due, and posted to web.
May 12-15 Workshop
Sponsored
by:
The New Transparency – Surveillance and Social Sorting.
International Program Committee: Jeffrey
Chester (Center for Digital Democracy), Roger Clarke (Australian Privacy
Foundation), Gus Hosein (Privacy International, London School of
Economics), Helen Nissenbaum (New York University), Charles Raab
(University of Edinburgh) and Priscilla Regan (George Mason
University)
Organizing Committee: Colin Bennett,
Andrew Clement, Kate Milberry & Chris Parsons, University of Toronto
& University of Victoria
--
M. Kathleen Milberry, PhD
Post-doctoral Research Fellow
Faculty of Information
University of Toronto
Toronto, ON Canada
(604) 787-5903
blog:
http://geeksandglobaljustice.com
Twitter: @KateMilberry
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]