4 Talking Points: Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith on privacy, technology, Edward Snowden | BetaBoston, 5 November 2014

On Tuesday, Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith spoke at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society, facing an audience that included some of the loudest critics of the NSA’s activities in the US.

Leading the discussion Tuesday afternoon was Jonathan Zittrain, cyberlaw scholar, Berkman founder, and professor at Harvard Law School.

via 4 Talking Points: Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith on privacy, technology, Edward Snowden | BetaBoston.

The Truth About Teenagers, The Internet, And Privacy | Fast Company | Business + Innovation, 4 November 2014

danah boyd, a professor at Harvard University’s Berkman Center for the Internet and Society, argues that teenagers closely scrutinize what they share online because it is a way for them to negotiate their changing identities. In her book, It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens, she describes how teenagers carefully curate their feeds based on the audience they are trying to reach.This is their chance, for instance, to make a positive impression on the cool kids at school or highlight their taste in indie music to impress a person they have a crush on. In other words, the pressure to create a unique identity pushes teens to disclose things publicly that adults may choose not to.

via The Truth About Teenagers, The Internet, And Privacy | Fast Company | Business + Innovation.

Doppelnamers: When Your Digital Identity Is Also Someone Else’s : All Tech Considered : NPR, 31 October 2014

“One of the most important things online is the reputation you build up: what you said, what you’ve done, what’s said about you. It’s really the entirety of an identity in a world where there’s no body,” says Judith Donath, a researcher at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. She specializes in online identity. “When you share a name with many other people, you start sharing, effectively, a history and reputation with them,” Donath says.

In 2005, writer Mike Sager wasn’t keen to share his name with so many other Mike Sagers.

via Doppelnamers: When Your Digital Identity Is Also Someone Else’s : All Tech Considered : NPR.

Why the U.S. Has Fallen Behind in Internet Speed and Affordability – NYTimes.com, 30 October 2014

The big Internet providers have little reason to upgrade their entire networks to fiber because there has so far been little pressure from competitors or regulators to do so, said Susan Crawford, a visiting professor at Harvard Law School and author of “Captive Audience: Telecom Monopolies in the New Gilded Age.”There are signs of a growing movement for cities to build their own fiber networks and lease the fiber to retail Internet providers. Some, like San Antonio, already have fiber in place, but there are policies restricting them from using it to offer Internet services to consumers. Other cities, like Santa Monica, Calif., have been laying fiber during other construction projects.

via Why the U.S. Has Fallen Behind in Internet Speed and Affordability – NYTimes.com.

Italy Pioneers An Internet Bill of Rights | TechPresident, 28 October 2014

“We’ve been talking about the necessity of an Internet Bill of Rights for many years,” writes Rodotà in an email exchange with techPresident. As an example, he recalls the “institutional initiatives” by the 2005 UN World Summit on the Internet Society in Tunisia, the 2009 International Governance Forum in Rio de Janeiro, and European Parliament in 2009. “The Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard surveyed 87 declaration of rights from groups, associations and dynamic coalitions both in several countries and transnationally,” he explained.

via Italy Pioneers An Internet Bill of Rights | TechPresident.

New Tolling System May Sacrifice Privacy For Convenience – News and reviews – Boston.com, 28 October 2014

“There are privacy concerns used to be an anonymous transaction now produces a data record,” said security technologist Bruce Schiener. Data could be shared with fusion centers, information sharing centers, or pieced together to reveal peoples’ daily routines.Privacy concerns around E-ZPass transponders aren’t new, but with the state’s new system, there will be a data trail around all cars at toll plazas, E-ZPass or no.“Removing the choice of privacy gives us fewer options to have privacy. It’s like making envelopes illegal and making us use postcards, or banning window shades,” said Schneier, a fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

via New Tolling System May Sacrifice Privacy For Convenience – News and reviews – Boston.com.

Staples data breach raises question of – Silicon Valley Business Journal, 23 October 2014

Bruce Schneier, a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard who specializes in computer security and cryptography, says the most important thing a person can do is to agitate for political change, since it can eventually lead to legislative change. Of course, there are practical steps consumers should take to protect their data as well.

via Staples data breach raises question of – Silicon Valley Business Journal.

DDoS Attacks: Legitimate Form of Protest or Criminal Act? | PCMag.com, 21 October 2014

A basic premise of a democratic society gives its citizens rights to participate in debate and effect change by taking to the streets to demonstrate. In the U.S., this is enshrined in the Bill of Rights under the First Amendment.

But what happens when we all effectively live, work, shop, date, bank and get into political debates online? Because online, as Molly Sauter points out in her book The Coming Swarm, there are no streets on which to march. “Because of the densely intertwined nature of property and speech in the online space, unwelcome acts of collective protest become also acts of trespass.”

via DDoS Attacks: Legitimate Form of Protest or Criminal Act? | PCMag.com.