Team for Research in
Ubiquitous Secure Technology

Too Close For Comfort: Free Speech, Privacy, and the Demonstrate Project
Ken Goldberg and Deirdre Mulligan

Citation
Ken Goldberg and Deirdre Mulligan. "Too Close For Comfort: Free Speech, Privacy, and the Demonstrate Project". Talk or presentation, 15, September, 2005.

Abstract
Like oxygen, privacy is an odorless, colorless substance usually taken for granted. It is deeply rooted in both the personal and the social, evoking a range of human responses. Political and technical developments have have altered privacy's ecosystem of expectations, laws and behaviors. To expand the dialogue on visual privacy, we set out to demonstrate -- to make visible -- concrete examples of privacy in practice:

We installed a state-of-the-art robotic webcamera over UC Berkeley's Sproul Plaza, birthplace of the Free Speech Movement. For six weeks, the camera was made accessible to anyone on the Internet. Online participants shared remote control of the robot camera, allowing them to zoom in to frame and photograph activity on the Plaza at any time of day or night. During the six-week course of the installation, over 1100 images were taken, putting public activity in Sproul Plaza under scrutiny and placing online participants in the position of hidden observers. The installation provoked a range of reactions. I'll describe what was observed, the controversies, and illustrate with images taken by users.

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Citation formats  
  • HTML
     Ken Goldberg and Deirdre Mulligan. <a
    href="http://www.truststc.org/pubs/6.html"
    ><i>Too Close For Comfort: Free Speech, Privacy,
    and the Demonstrate Project</i></a>, Talk or
    presentation,  15, September, 2005.
  • Plain text
     Ken Goldberg and Deirdre Mulligan. "Too Close For
    Comfort: Free Speech, Privacy, and the Demonstrate
    Project". Talk or presentation,  15, September, 2005.
  • BibTeX
    @presentation{GoldbergMulligan05_TooCloseForComfortFreeSpeechPrivacyDemonstrateProject,
        author = { Ken Goldberg and Deirdre Mulligan},
        title = {Too Close For Comfort: Free Speech, Privacy, and
                  the Demonstrate Project},
        day = {15},
        month = {September},
        year = {2005},
        abstract = { Like oxygen, privacy is an odorless, colorless
                  substance usually taken for granted. It is deeply
                  rooted in both the personal and the social,
                  evoking a range of human responses. Political and
                  technical developments have have altered privacy's
                  ecosystem of expectations, laws and behaviors. To
                  expand the dialogue on visual privacy, we set out
                  to demonstrate -- to make visible -- concrete
                  examples of privacy in practice: <p>We installed a
                  state-of-the-art robotic webcamera over UC
                  Berkeley's Sproul Plaza, birthplace of the Free
                  Speech Movement. For six weeks, the camera was
                  made accessible to anyone on the Internet. Online
                  participants shared remote control of the robot
                  camera, allowing them to zoom in to frame and
                  photograph activity on the Plaza at any time of
                  day or night. During the six-week course of the
                  installation, over 1100 images were taken, putting
                  public activity in Sproul Plaza under scrutiny and
                  placing online participants in the position of
                  hidden observers. The installation provoked a
                  range of reactions. I'll describe what was
                  observed, the controversies, and illustrate with
                  images taken by users. },
        URL = {http://www.truststc.org/pubs/6.html}
    }
    

Posted by Christopher Brooks on 22 Sep 2005.
Groups: trustseminar
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