[open-science] Privacy and open research data

Song, Stephen stephen.song at gmail.com
Mon Feb 18 17:40:46 UTC 2013


On 18 February 2013 13:17, Peter Murray-Rust <pm286 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:

> On Mon, Feb 18, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Song, Stephen <stephen.song at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Hi Jenny,
>>
>> Thanks for your thoughtful reply and for the very useful additional
>> resources.  I should preface my remarks by saying these are emerging
>> thoughts on my part as I participate with a development research funding
>> organisation in thinking through what Open Data means to them.
>>
>> I fully take your point about the "hard" sciences, if that isn't already
>> too loaded an adjective.  There is obviously plenty of research that
>> doesn't trigger privacy concerns.  However, if I have learned anything in
>> my recent investigation, it is that the boundaries are fuzzier than I
>> imagined.  The kind of differential diagnosis process that privacy
>> researchers use to infer new information from disparate data sources is
>> both remarkable and disturbing at the same time.
>>
>
> It would be very useful to have some examples of these.
>

As a start, Paul Ohm's "Broken Promises of Privacy" does a great job of
illustrating the problem through a number of different examples.

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1450006

-Steve


>
> P.
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>
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> --
> Peter Murray-Rust
> Reader in Molecular Informatics
> Unilever Centre, Dep. Of Chemistry
> University of Cambridge
> CB2 1EW, UK
> +44-1223-763069




-- 
Steve Song
+1 902 529 0046
+27 83 482 2088 (SMS only)
http://manypossibilities.net
http://villagetelco.org
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