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3 TheEthical IssuesofLearningAnalytics… 45
victory for commercial interestsoverpersonalprivacy.Today the scaleofdataheld
by LotusMarketplace, and the threat of increased junk mail which it presented,
both seem insignificant. The supermarketswherewe shop (Rowley, 2007) and the
websiteswhichwevisit (Evans,2009)holdandexchangevastlymoredetaileddata
aboutusthanLotuscouldhavedreamedof.TherevelationsofSnowdon(Greenwald,
2014)have shown that governments have secretlydevelopedvast infrastructures to
monitor and analyze the communications of individuals.CambridgeAnalytica, the
firmaccusedofharvestingmillionsof people’s data fromFacebook, “saidpublicly
thatitheldupto5000datapointsoneachofover230millionAmericanvoters.”(Mr.
JusticeNorris,2019).While thiscaseendedinlitigation,noeffectiveoppositionhas
emergedtothegatheringofdataonamassivescalebyprivatecompanies,anditsuse
inmarketing,advertisingandpolitics.Similarly,within thefieldofLAtheInBloom
analytics initiativewasclosedfollowingapublic reaction to intrusivedatagathering
(Bulger,McCormick&Pitcan,2017),but thishasnotslowedthegrowthofthefield.
Zuboff (2019) argues that Google has taken a leading role in these develop-
ments andprovides a detailed analysis of the strategy establishedbyGoogleChief
EconomistHalVariantoleveragethedatagatheredbythecompany.By2014Varian
wasconfident enough toassert that thesenewprocedureswithprivate andpersonal
datahadbecomeacceptedpractice rather thanamatter fordiscussion:
‘There is no putting the genie back in the bottle…Everyone will expect to be tracked
andmonitored, since the advantages, in termsof convenience, safety, and services,will be
so great…continuousmonitoringwill be the norm (Varian,H, quoted in PEWResearch
(2014)).
Zuboffherselfhaspainteda lessoptimisticviewof thisoutcome:
…our lives areunilaterally renderedasdata, expropriated, and repurposed innewformsof
socialcontrol, allof it in theserviceofothers’ interestsand in theabsenceofourawareness
ormeansofcombat. (Zuboff, 2019,p.54)
Zuboff (2019) identifies as ‘surveillance capitalism’ the methods which have
driven the expansion of the analysis of personal data since the emergence of the
Internet. Itsprincipal actors arecommercialorganisationsandsecurityagencies, its
workingsare shrouded in secrecy, and itspurpose is toobtainpersonalororganisa-
tional advantage.LA, incontrast, is a self-declaredcommunityofacademicswork-
ing towardsanexplicit goalof improvingeducation, andsharing theirmethodsand
insights inpublicconferences.Thiscontrastmeansthat theemergenceofLAcannot
beexplainedassimplyamanifestationofsurveillancecapitalism.Nevertheless,LA
shares someof themethods and assumptions of surveillance capitalism, and these
carrywith themassumptionsaboutdatagatheringandusewhichmayshed lighton
theethical tanglewhichLAfindsitself in.Theseassumptionswerewellsummarised
byBill Schmarzo, chief technical officer ofEMCGlobal Services: “I’mahoarder,
I want it all. And even if I don’t yet knowhow I’ll use that data, I want it…My
datascience teammightfindausefor it” (Bertolucci,2014). Informedconsent fora
specifiedpurpose, is clearlynot compatiblewith suchastrategy.
Thechangeswhichhave takenplace in thepracticeof data collection in society
havehadasubstantial impactonthemethodologyofthesocialsciences, totheextent
Radical Solutions and Open Science
An Open Approach to Boost Higher Education
- Title
- Radical Solutions and Open Science
- Subtitle
- An Open Approach to Boost Higher Education
- Editor
- Daniel Burgos
- Publisher
- Springer Open
- Date
- 2020
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-981-15-4276-3
- Size
- 16.0 x 24.1 cm
- Pages
- 200
- Category
- Informatik