Social Cooperation and Privacy

Personal information is a dynamic and expanding kind of information emergent from human capabilities

Image by Ann Racuya-Robbins Copyright 2012
Social Cooperation and Privacy

Social Cooperation, Human Capabilities and Privacy

An excerpt

Ann Racuya-Robbins

November 2, 2014

What is personal information and why does it matter for privacy and social cooperation?

Personal information is a dynamic and expanding kind of information emergent from human capabilities and life experience. Personal information belongs to each person in the same way that human rights and dignities do and each person creates his or her own personal information. When human capabilities are protected and encouraged human capabilities can continue to emerge and grow. This continues to expand the personal information available. Without protection human capabilities’ personal information will be exploited by the strong against the weak and the inequities in our current societies will be replicated. Generally speaking the protection of human capabilities is the raison d’etre of privacy.  Human life and capabilities is the essential source of wealth in the world. Privacy of human capabilities’ personal information is distinct in many ways from the security of personal information. But I won’t go further into that here.

Because personal information of human capabilities is valuable in so many ways including commercially, attempts will continue to be made to separate people from his or her personal information.  One of the recent strategies has been to fracture the human life personal information into bits, attributes, such as a person’s gender, hair color, weight, eye color, height, with the rationale that this fracturing separates the attribute from person, making that piece of human personal information available to be exploited without the person of origin benefiting. Similarly there is an attempt to make the “things” of the Internet of Things separate from the person in order in part to exploit and name the device information as something other than personal.

Personal information from human capabilities is, as I said, an emergent and expanding domain.  Human attributes and personal information belong to the same domain of human capabilities. Through analysis many inferences from human attributes and or personal information can be discovered, revealed and acted upon. There is no perceptible end today to human capabilities for good. There has emerged over the last 75 years a very clear and palpable end to the human capabilities for destruction.  It is fair to say that it is within all of our best interest to reduce the capabilities for destruction and protect capabilities for good.

Image by Ann Racuya-Robbins Copyright 2012
Social Cooperation and Privacy

I also agree with much of Bob Pinheiro’s definition below as a beginning point for personal information.

“So instead I’ll use the term “personal information” to refer to two kinds of information that I believe we’re concerned about: (a) the information that people specifically provide about themselves, as well as information that people directly generate about themselves, and (b) information or “intelligence” about people that others infer based on our observable online activities and behaviors. Included under (a) would be every piece of information that people specifically provide about themselves to service providers, social media, etc., including PII such as name, address, etc. Also included would be our calling and messaging histories, and browsing histories, as recorded on our personal devices. Examples of (b) would be the credit scores that credit bureaus develop about us based on our financially-related activities, intelligence about our preferences, likes, dislikes, etc that third parties develop and sell based on our online activities, and of course the metadata that the NSA develops based on our telephone records.” Bob Pinheiro

Personal Information in Commercial Transactions

Transactions in cyberspace or the internet are unique in many ways. Commonly, for example the entity that owns or holds the data of a website in a server has a built-in advantage over the visitor to a site. In commercial transactions the visitor typically exchanges at least one item of monetary value just by visiting a location—his or her personals ip address and/or a referring site’s ip address. These are personal attributes and information of commercial value “the new money” as Anhil John describes it.

Personal information from human capabilities is, as I said, an emergent and expanding domain.  Human attributes and personal information belong to the same domain of human capabilities. Today there is no perceptible end to human capabilities for good. There has emerged over the last 75 years a very clear and palpable end to the human capabilities for destruction.  It is fair to say that it is within all of our best interest to reduce the capabilities for destruction and protect capabilities for good.

However, I see no reason why addressing these fundamental challenges are out of scope or need to wait. After all that is one of the advantages of the private sector is the ability to create and operate under contract law.

I recommend that the completion of a Memorandum of Social Cooperation the spells out the fairness of the relationship in clear and understandable language and that protects all parties in a commercial relationship including the equitable resolution of the distribution of the monetary value of personal information. It should be the first step in all online transactions.