Authors
Peter Tolmie, Andy Crabtree, Tom Rodden, James Colley, Ewa Luger
Publication date
2016/2/27
Book
Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing
Pages
491-502
Description
Notions like 'Big Data' and the 'Internet of Things' turn upon anticipated harvesting of personal data through ubiquitous computing and networked sensing systems. It is largely presumed that understandings of people's everyday interactions will be relatively easy to 'read off' of such data and that this, in turn, poses a privacy threat. An ethnographic study of how people account for sensed data to third parties uncovers serious challenges to such ideas. The study reveals that the legibility of sensor data turns upon various orders of situated reasoning involved in articulating the data and making it accountable. Articulation work is indispensable to personal data sharing and raises real requirements for networked sensing systems premised on the harvesting of personal data.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Tolmie, A Crabtree, T Rodden, J Colley, E Luger - Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer …, 2016