|
||||
|
||||
Data Mining and the Security-Liberty DebateDaniel J. SoloveGeorge Washington University Law School University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 74, p. 343, 2008 GWU Law School Public Law Research Paper No. 278 Abstract: In this essay, written for a symposium on surveillance for the University of Chicago Law Review, I examine some common difficulties in the way that liberty is balanced against security in the context of data mining. Countless discussions about the trade-offs between security and liberty begin by taking a security proposal and then weighing it against what it would cost our civil liberties. Often, the liberty interests are cast as individual rights and balanced against the security interests, which are cast in terms of the safety of society as a whole. Courts and commentators defer to the government's assertions about the effectiveness of the security interest. In the context of data mining, the liberty interest is limited by narrow understandings of privacy that neglect to account for many privacy problems. As a result, the balancing concludes with a victory in favor of the security interest. But as I argue, important dimensions of data mining's security benefits require more scrutiny, and the privacy concerns are significantly greater than currently acknowledged. These problems have undermined the balancing process and skewed the results toward the security side of the scale.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 20 Keywords: privacy, security, liberty, data mining, NSA, surveillance, deference, balancing JEL Classification: C80, D80, H56 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: June 1, 2007 ; Last revised: March 13, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo4 in 5.001 seconds