Difference between revisions of "A Closer Look at Location Data: Privacy and Pandemics (Q4311)"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created claim: instance of (P3): scholarly article (Q210)) |
(Created claim: comment (P126): Governments should consider how the location data was collected in the first instance (with users’ knowledge or consent?), and if the decision is made to repurpose it for pandemic tracking, it should be clearly siloed for that purpose and not re-used or retained for other civil or law enforcement uses.) |
||
Property / comment | |||
+ | Governments should consider how the location data was collected in the first instance (with users’ knowledge or consent?), and if the decision is made to repurpose it for pandemic tracking, it should be clearly siloed for that purpose and not re-used or retained for other civil or law enforcement uses. | ||
Property / comment: Governments should consider how the location data was collected in the first instance (with users’ knowledge or consent?), and if the decision is made to repurpose it for pandemic tracking, it should be clearly siloed for that purpose and not re-used or retained for other civil or law enforcement uses. / rank | |||
+ | Normal rank |
Revision as of 21:01, 25 March 2020
newspaper article published on March 25, 2020
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English |
A Closer Look at Location Data: Privacy and Pandemics
|
newspaper article published on March 25, 2020
|
Statements
25 March 2020
0 references
In this series, Privacy and Pandemics, the Future of Privacy Forum explores the challenges posed by the COVID-19 crisis to existing ethical, privacy, and data protection frameworks. Part 1: A Closer Look at Location Data
0 references
Governments should consider how the location data was collected in the first instance (with users’ knowledge or consent?), and if the decision is made to repurpose it for pandemic tracking, it should be clearly siloed for that purpose and not re-used or retained for other civil or law enforcement uses.
0 references