Privacy and Surveillance in Web 2.0: Unintended Consequences and the Rise of “Netaveillance”
By: Michael Zimmer
May 29, 2007
This post is an attempt to collect and organize some thoughts on how
the rise of so-called Web 2.0 technologies bear on privacy and
surveillance studies. After presenting a few examples of unintended
consequences of Web 2.0
that bear on privacy and surveillance, I will introduce the term
“netaveillance,” which might provide a useful concept around which a
more robust theory of surveillance about the Web 2.0 phenomena might be
built.
The rhetoric surrounding the Web 2.0 movement presents certain
cultural claims about media, identity, and technology. It suggests that
everyone can and should use new Internet technologies to organize and
share information, to interact within communities, and to express
oneself. It promises to empower creativity, to democratize media
production, and to celebrate the individual while also relishing the
power of collaboration and social networks. Websites such as Flickr, Wikipedia, del.icio.us, MySpace, and YouTube
are all part of this apparent second-generation Internet phenomenon,
which has spurred a variety of new services and communities – and
venture capitalist dollars.
This cartoon
of a room full of people arguing at a cocktail party after someone
mentioned the provocative theories of Marshall McLuhan reminds me of
today’s emotional debates over the relative impact – and even the very
existence – of Web 2.0. Many hail Web 2.0 as the “new wisdom of the web,” and “a new cultural force based on mass collaboration,” while others deride it as merely a marketing jingo, “amoral,” and even an extension of Marxist ideology.
This last notion, the relationship between Web 2.0 and Marxism, was suggested by Andrew Keen, one of the loudest provocateurs of the Web 2.0 ideology. Keen has received considerable criticism
for making comparisons between the Web 2.0 meme and Marxism, but,
between the vitriol, he does make some valid points about the
utopianism and solipsism that seems to underlie much of the Web 2.0
discourse. In particular, he criticizes the fervent commitment to
technological progress:
The ideology of the Web 2.0 movement was perfectly
summarized at the Technology Education and Design (TED) show in
Monterey, last year, when Kevin Kelly, Silicon Valley’s über-idealist
and author of the Web 1.0 Internet utopia Ten Rules for The New
Economy, said:
“Imagine Mozart before the technology of the piano. Imagine Van Gogh
before the technology of affordable oil paints. Imagine Hitchcock
before the technology of film. We have a moral obligation to develop
technology.”
But where Kelly sees a moral obligation to develop technology, we
should actually have–if we really care about Mozart, Van Gogh and
Hitchcock–a moral obligation to question the development of technology.
[emphasis added]
This moral obligation to question the development of technology
compels Keen to identify some of the unintended consequences of the
emergence of Web 2.0 infrastructures, including the flattening of
culture, the overabundance of amateur authors and producers, and
narcissism run wild.
As I begin to study the Web 2.0 meme from the perspective of privacy
and surveillance theory, a different set of unintended consequences
emerges, including shifts in the flow of personal information that
might threaten personal privacy in ways much more damaging than Keen’s
concern that content is now made and distributed by mere amateurs
instead of honed professionals.
For example, Web 2.0 applications often rely on rich metadata to create value in information, such as the geotagging of images uploaded to Flickr. While it might be useful and fun to have locational data automatically associated with your images, considerable privacy concerns emerge as an externality. For instance, law enforcement officials can simply search for all photos
online matching the location & timing of a certain political rally
in order to broaden their ability to keep records of who was present.
Or, combined with the development of facial recognition technologies with shared online photos,
stalkers (or other annoying folks) might soon be able to search for a
certain person’s face, and discover the GPS coordinates of the coffee
shop they seem to be pictured in every Tuesday morning. Someone even
developed a tool, FlickerInspector, to facilitate this kind of mining of the datastreams users leave behind on Flickr.
Of course, one doesn’t need a fancy application like
FlickerInspector to reap the benefits of the new datastreams
facilitated by Web 2.0 applications. Inherent in Web 2.0 evangelism is
an overall faith in the network to be the processing platform: users
are encouraged to put as much of their lives as possible online, to
divulge and share their personal lives, their professional development, their favorite websites, their music, their friendships, their appointments, and even where they’ve connected to wi-fi. If you know a person’s “handle” on one Web 2.0 site (“michaelzimmer” at del.icio.us), you probably can find them on many more (Plazes, LibraryThing).
The prevalence of sharing so many details of one’s life through
various Web 2.0 and social networking sites, and the relative ease of
finding users across these services, leads to a second key externality:
the rise of amateur data-mining. Fueled by the power and reach of Web
search engines, it seems anyone can now engage in the kind of tracking
and data-mining of user’s online activities that was once possibly only
by the most powerful of computer systems.
An interesting case of amateur data mining made possible through Web 2.0 involves “Don, the camera thief.” The blog BoingBoing posted a story of a woman who lost her camera
while on vacation, but was contacted by the family who happened to find
it. Unfortunately – and oddly – the family who found it refused to
return the camera because their child liked it so much. BoingBoing
thought the actions by the finders of the camera were “shameful.” A few
days after posting this, BoingBoing received an e-mail
from someone who claimed his name was “Don Deveny,” purportedly a
Canadian lawyer, who implied that the post was illegal and that
BoingBoing was liable for making it. The folks at BoingBoing doubted
the legitimacy of the email (the word “lawyer” was misspelled, for
example), and decided to see what he could find out about “Don.”
They first contacted many of the law societies in Canada, none of
whom had any record of a “Don Deveny” licensed to practice law in
Canada. (by the way, it is illegal to pretend to be a lawyer). From
their e-mail exchange, they were able to isolate the writer’s real
e-mail address from the message headers, and through a Google search,
located other pages that contain that address. That led them to a
profile page for a user of the website called “Canada Kick A**” who
shared the very same e-mail address. That profile page had a different
person’s name (perhaps “Don’s” real name?), and also listed a location
and profession for the user (he’s not a lawyer). It didn’t take much to
figure out (or at least get a better clue) as to who this e-mailer was,
and his profile page on a Web 2.0-inspired discussion board made it
much easier.
Readers of BoingBoing did some amateur data mining of their own: a
commenter at the original camera owner’s blog seemed to share many of
the same sentiments of “Don,” along with many of the same spelling
errors. This commenter used a different screen name, but when asked to
identify himself, also said he was a lawyer. Another reader then
discovered that a user with that same screen name recently bid on
memory cards at eBay that would have been used in the stolen camera.
More amateur data mining ensued, and discovered another user profile at
a different discussion forum with the same user name and same “favorite
sites” listed in the signature file. And this page included a photo of
the user: Is this “Don” our camera thief?
Another example of the ease of amateur data mining with the help of
Web 2.0 services is the outing of Lonelygirl15. Lonelygirl15 was the
mysterious girl leaving video confessions on YouTube,
garnering a huge following of devoted fans, yet know one knew who she
was or if they were really just a kid’s video diary or perhaps a large
hoax or advertising campaign. After some amateur data mining, the truth came out:
A reader was surfing an article on Lonelygirl15 at a random website
when he came across a comment that linked to a private MySpace page
that was allegedly that of the actress who plays Lonelygirl15. Since
the profile was set to “private,” very little information one could
glean from the page. However, when he queried Google for that
particular MySpace user name, “jeessss426,” he was able to access
Google’s cache from the page a few months ago when it was still public.
A lot of the details of the girl’s background quickly emerged: She was
an actress from a small city in New Zealand who had moved to Burbank
recently to act. The name on the profile was “Jessica Rose.” When he
happened to query Google image search for “Jessica Rose New Zealand” he
was instantly rewarded with two cached thumbnail photos of
Lonelygirl15, a.k.a. Jessica Rose, from a New Zealand talent agency
that had since removed the full size versions. A search on Yahoo for
“jeessss426” also turned up various pictures from her (probably forgotten) ImageShack photo sharing account. Lonelygirl15 was revealed.
Little effort was needed to link up the various e-mails, user names,
personal data flows, and photos shared across blogs, discussion forums
and other Web 2.0-style sites to track down “Don the camera thief” or
“LoneyGirl15”. Moving more and more of our activities to Web 2.0 makes
it harder to remain anonymous, and the myth of “security through
obscurity” seems to be disappearing as various crumbs of our true
identity are being scattered across the Web 2.0 landscape.
A final externality of Web 2.0 relates to a new form of
informational voyeurism that these platforms enable. While Web 2.0
sites have enjoyed incredible growth and heavy viral participation,
only a small fraction of overall users actually use the services to
upload content – the vast majority just likes to lurk and watch.
According to one report,
only 0.16 percent of YouTube’s total traffic is made up of users who
upload videos. Similarly, only 0.2 percent of Flickr’s regular users
are there to upload photos. And slick new tools emerge daily to
facilitate the surveillance and voyeurism of people’s daily activities.
For example, “feeds” on Facebook
allow users to be notified immediately when a friend updates their
profile (changing their mood, their friend list, their relationship
status, etc), dodgeball helps users find friends (and unknown friends of friends) within a 10 block radius of their present location, DiggSpy allows real-time monitoring of user’s activities on the popular news ranking site Digg, and Twitter
has quickly emerged as the hottest new voyeuristic service, allowing
users to share text snippets of their day-to-day activities, and
monitor others’ streams of the mundane details of their lives (such as “a whole gang of women with dogs just walked past my window”).
What seems to be emerging is a new form of voyeuristic surveillance
of people’s everyday lives, fueled by Web 2.0. This has been referred
to varyingly as “peer-to-peer surveillance” or even as a new kind of “participatory panopticon.”
Yet these terms – and the theories embedded within them – seem
insufficient to fully grasp the significance of the emergence of this
new voyeurism of the mundane. Surveillance,
of course, implies the “watching over” of subjects from above, with an
explicit power relationship between the watchers and those placed under
its gaze. Trying to describe surveillance as “peer-to-peer” suggests a
flattening of the power relationship that is counter to its very
definition. Similarly, the notion of a “participatory panopticon” is at
the same time redundant and contradictory. Foucault revealed how
panoptic power becomes internalized by the subjects, thus, they
necessarily “participate” in their own subjugation. Yet the top-down
power relationship within the panoptic structure remains. The
participation by the subjects does not make them equal with the
watchers. Yet the informational voyeurism associated with Web 2.0 seems
to imply a balance between the users: one shares their data streams in
order to improve the overall worth of the network, coupled with the
presumption that they’ll be able to observe and leverage others’
streams as well.
This notion resembles that of “equiveillance,” a state of equilibrium between the top-down power of surveillance, and the resistant bottom-up watching of sousveillance.
Yet, this notion implies merely a balance in access to surveillance
information, and is focused more on how to reach some kind of
harmonious relationship with our rising surveillance society. With the
informational voyeurism of Web 2.0, however, the goal isn’t to resist
or come to terms with the power yielded by traditional surveillance,
but rather to participate in a widespread and open sharing of the
mundane details of one’s daily life. To give one’s peers a glimpse into
one’s own personal universe. These snapshots of the minutia of people’s
lives have been compared to the Japanese concept of “neta”, the tidbits of people’s lives that are shared with family and friends as a kind of social currency. The Japan Media Review (an affiliate of Annenberg’s Online Journalism Review) recently made an insightful connection between “neta” and Web 2.0 voyeurism:
In Japanese, "material" for news and stories is called
"neta." The term has strong journalistic associations, but also gets
used to describe material that can become the topic of conversation
among friends or family: a new store seen on the way to work; a cousin
who just dropped out of high school; a funny story heard on the radio.
Camera phones provide a new tool for making these everyday neta not
just verbally but also visually shareable.
As the mundane is elevated to a photographic object, the everyday is
now the site of potential news and visual archiving. Sending
camera-phone photos to major news outlets and moblogging are one end of
a broad spectrum of everyday and mass photojournalism using camera
phones. What counts as newsworthy, noteworthy and photo-worthy spans a
broad spectrum from personally noteworthy moments that are never shared
(a scene from an escalator) to intimately newsworthy moments to be
shared with a spouse or lover (a new haircut, a child riding a bike).
It also includes neta to be shared among family or peers (a friend
captured in an embarrassing moment, a cute pet shot) and microcontent
uploaded to blogs and online journals. The transformation of journalism
through camera phones is as much about these everyday exchanges as it
is about the latest headline.
Building on this Japanese concept of “neta,” I propose a new kind of
“veillance” has emerged with Web 2.0 infrastructures: “netaveillance”.
Netaveillance can be defined as the process of openly and purposefully
providing an almost continual stream of the details of one’s daily life
– the mundane, the profane, and the vain – through Web-based
technologies, coupled with the ability to capture similar data streams
from one’s peers. Netaveillance constitutes an emerging ecosystem of
personal data flows – not the exceptional information meant to be
protected from state or commercial surveillance, but the free and open
sharing of the minutiae of our lives.
My conceptualization of netaveillance is, to be sure, in its most
nascent of stages. Much work needs to be done to contemplate how it
relates to existing theories of privacy and surveillance, how power
relations between and among participants might still exist, how such
data flows could be captured by state or commercial interests, and so
on. Theorizing and understanding netaveillance is no small task, but it
might provide a new language and framework from which to understand the
informational voyeurism and related unintended consequences of the Web
2.0 phenomenon.
Whether you want to bring it up at a cocktail party is up to you.
|