Categories
Digital Identity Web/Tech

Hierarchies – of Life and of Privacy

Hierarchy-of-Needs-Meeker.pngA couple of months back in one of her presentations on the impact of the Internet, Morgan Stanley’s Mary Meeker used a slide describing today’s hierarchy of individual needs.

In today’s post-modern culture, we don’t achieve self-actualization without having our “always on” access to the Internet – and – our ever present companions: mobile phones.

Take a look at the rest of those recurring payments hitting your credit cards each month – you might find a few other things in your own personal hierarchy of needs that are required for your “well being”!

Indeed, in her haste to make points about connectivity and mobility, Meeker overlooked some other basic necessities of life – like that credit card! After all, what good is the Internet without shopping at Amazon? And, what good is your mobile phone without your personalized ring tone?

Hierarchy-of-Needs-Maslow.pngIsn’t it interesting that the computer isn’t even mentioned by Meeker — just the connectivity. After all, what use today is a computer that isn’t connected to the Internet?

And, who has time for esteem any more anyway?

Of course, this was all a bit of a fun play on Abraham Maslow‘s original hierarchy of human needs proposed initially in 1943. Maslow’s hierarchy is based upon the premise that the path to self-actualization demands satisfaction of all of the lower level needs first. Sure, it’s all just Psych 101 stuff, but it’s fun and something we can all relate to as Maslow’s theory feels personally very appropriate.

A few weeks back, along comes Tim Oren doing an exploration of privacy in this post-modern and totally connected world. Tim’s spent some time digging on the subject and shares some of his initial insights.

It seems to me that what Tim’s really focused on a new form of shelter in our lives — a “digital shelter” that provides a roof over our personal information and protects it just like the roof over our heads provides shelter from the terrestrial elements. Fulfilling our human needs for shelter demands that both our physical and – oh, sorry – our “logical” embodiments are both well protected — or we’ll be troubled, tossing and turning, worrying about why things in our life just don’t feel safe.

Hierarchy-of-Unease-Oren.pngTo help illustrate his points, Tim introduces a new (and perhaps more disturbing) hierarchy: the Hierarchy of Privacy Unease.

Tim’s Hierarchy of Privacy Unease begins at the top with the worst possible outcome – a direct financial loss. The actual effect of a direct financial loss on an individual’s well being depends upon who bears the actual risk of loss – the individual or a supplier of services to the individual.

For example, with credit cards in the US, the risk of loss to the individual is zero. Card number data breaches, while spun up by the press as alarming, are of financial impact only to the card issuers, not the cardholders. Even so, the cardholder may feel “violated” if victimized by stolen card information.

On the other hand, data breaches that expose “enough” personal information to enable true identity theft (such as the Choicepoint example earlier this year) are extremely disruptive to the individual and may require significant effort by the individual over months of time to resolve. Unfortunately, in today’s easy credit society, having “enough” personal information boils down to the information requested on a credit card application coupled with some social engineering cleverness that is well known by fraudsters.

Next on Tim’s hierarchy is intrusion – the simple desire we all share to live our lives without unwelcome interruptions. Interruptions of any kind disturb our flow; unwelcome or inappropriate interruptions generate emotions of anger or fear. Sounds quite a bit like the “pursuit of happiness” now, doesn’t it?!

Tim’s compartment breach layer is one I’ve not thought a lot about before – but which resonates with me now that he’s pointed it out. Individually, we do rely on compartments to help secure our lives and well being. Compromises that enable cross-compartment linkages to be derived are disturbing and another potential threat to our well being.

The loss of information asymmetry is another destabilizer for the individual when it happens. Related to the notion of compartmentalization, none of us likes to be at a disadvantage when it comes to knowledge. We want to know the dealer invoice for that car we’re negotiating to buy – and we don’t want the dealer to know anything about our history of car purchases that might be used against us in a negotiation. It just doesn’t feel “right” when something someone knows about us is used against us in that way.

In Tim’s everything else category goes the seemingly endless tradeoffs we each make as we provide “just enough” of our personal information to third parties in trade for some sort of economic reward. We do so believing in real “compartmentalization” – that the data we provide to Safeway for participating in their discount program won’t be used against us in some other way.

Privacy policies are the primary mechanisms the data collectors use to inform us about their use of our data. Data breaches, which don’t abide by anyone’s privacy policies and, indeed, tear them to shreds, are increasingly the primary forces that expose us to damage – by putting us at an information disadvantage, invading our compartments of data, and moving us up Tim’s hierarchy, eventually destroying the digital shelter of protection over our heads – and our well being. Tim’s Hierarchy of Privacy Unease provides us with a very helpful way to think about these issues.

Of course, what we’d all really like to see is effective “pest control” in place between these layers – for it’s the very erosion of the layers that leads to these bad things happening. We want to know, with certainty, that those with whom we trade our personal information will take all necessary steps to protect it and use it responsibly.

Increaasingly, what we want from them is a “Code of Personal Data Stewardship” that is clear and unambiguous about their responsibilities for protecting our personal information – including notifying us and accepting liability for any breaches they’re involved in that affect our personal information that we’ve entrusted to them.

Existing efforts to date have failed to provide this level of assurance and trust for the individual. Trust-E, for example, seems to “walk softly” on these issues – being largely a group supported by those who seek to obtain and use our personal information (and post Trust-E seals on their websites), not by individuals wanting to ensure their personal data receives comprehensive protection.

Legislative efforts, responding to the data breaches earlier this year at Choicepoint, CardSystems and others, currently appear to be primarily directed at beefing up data breach notification obligations – by extending California’s recently enacted notification requirements nationwide. Unfortunately, an effort by legislators to impose requirements for stronger personal data stewardship – and associated liability if not achieved – seems sorely lacking.

Tim’s post certainly advanced my understanding of these issues and helped me think through my own personal hierarchy of needs related to privacy of my personal information. There’s a lot of chatter on the web these days about digital identity – but it seems to me that these issues of personal data stewardship are truly the top priority in terms of enabling all of us to feel safe and secure with a sound “digital shelter” over our heads!

Categories
Web/Tech

Mainframe Geeks

The new Mainframe Geek blog by a bunch of IBM mainframe geeks brings back lots of memories. My earlier career was with IBM — in mainframes.

Probably the most exciting time for me was the launch of MVS in 1975 — I was living in Poughkeepsie at the time and we were working with our earliest major customers to try to shoe horn a bloated initial release into mainframes with 3 and 4 megabytes of memory!

As I sit here writing this with 2 GB on my laptop, it’s actually pretty amazing to look back at what was even possible in terms of applications on systems of that era.

Categories
Apple Web/Tech

My Personal Google

I’ve been running Mac OS X Tiger for the last couple of months and have come to rely pretty very heavily on its new Spotlight search technology for finding things I’ve tucked away for ambiguous future reference. Prior to Tiger, I had no real viable way to find any of these things I’ve saved. Now, I can find them all — in fact, too many more often than not!

I’d like my personal Google to incorporate some of the features I like most about regular Google — correcting spelling mistakes, for example, would be a very nice option. Another would be a common syntax — I use the Google filetype option extensively on my web searches (something about searching for a PDF that seems to result in higher quality search results). Finally, an integrated combo search — Spotlight for the web integrate with Spotlight on the desktop — would be ideal.

But I’m definitely hooked on Spotlight. It’s turned into a very valuable information tool — “how did I live without it” kind of thing. Sometimes I wonder what its effect will be over time on my hard drive’s life — as it’s definitely kept busier trying to keep up with me!

Categories
Books Radio Web/Tech

Listener Supported

Re: my earlier rant about the next generation of public radio, yesterday’s Sunday New York Times Book Review had a review by Columbia University journalism professor Samuel Freedman of Jack W. Mitchell’s book on public radio history “Listener Supported – The Culture and History of Public Radio“.

Categories
Radio Web/Tech

The Next Generation of Public Radio

Late last week, Doug Kaye spilled the beans about his plans for the future of IT Conversations and went on to discuss his new business model for the service.

In some ways, Doug’s plan seems to me to represent the next generation of public radio – except that Doug’s audio content – as with all podcasts, by definition – will be available when you want it, rather than when a public radio station’s program director chooses to run it.

Many years ago, the FCC started granting non-commercial radio licenses. It was a wonderful thing – an appropriate amount of our radio spectrum – a public resource – was set aside for non-commercial purposes. Over time, these non-commercial stations began to distribute the programming of various content production and distribution services including National Public Radio among others.

As I understand it, a typical public radio station’s budget includes fees paid for each of us listeners having real-time “over the air” access to this content — along with all of the other expenses involved with operating and maintaining an on-the-air FCC-licensed radio property.

As we move forward into the podcasting world, we can begin to see how this “legacy” content creation and distribution model of public radio might have to shift. Public radio audiences will begin to shrink, as radio audiences generally have done. Their ability to raise membership fees may be impacted as fewer listeners choose to support their legacy broadcast model – which can be thought of as “come listen to the programs on my schedule, not yours!” They may also end up suffering soon as a result of proposed Congressional reductions in the budget for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting which funds, on average, about fifteen percent of local NPR member public radio station budgets.

The smart public radio stations will see what’s coming — and embrace the changes. They’ll make their original content, to the extent they still have any, available via a distribution model similar to what Doug’s now proposing. If you want it quickly, pay for speed (one-time or membership options available, thank you). Share the revenues generated with all of the stakeholders responsible for getting that content to the listener. Alternatively, other stations might make today’s or this week’s or last week’s content available for free – with archive access perhaps requiring a fee or an annual membership. Maybe we’ll finally have an access control reason to subscribe during those inane public radio pledge drives!

The big gorilla, NPR, has some serious thinking to do here. It’s under assault not just by podcasting but by satellite radio. Ultimately, I think the bigger threat is podcasting — but the more immediate one may be Bob Edwards on the bird. How they decide to address the podcasting threat/opportunity will be very interesting to watch. Whether they decide to “go direct” to the listener and cut out their long-time local public radio affiliates will be an important test. While more efficient, I’d prefer to see them continue to keep their partners in the financial loop — enabling me, for example, to buy an MP3 podcast of today’s Fresh Air via my new form KQED membership that let’s me feel good about listening real-time over the car radio but gives me unlimited access to audio content archives when I’m looking for great stuff to tuck into my iPod for that long trip to China. We shall see.

Some automation of all of this payment and access control would be wonderful – and seems ultimately required for all of this to work right. Apple, with its new iTunes podcasting support now deployed on zillions of both Windows and Mac desktops, appears to be in a superb position to be this broker.

Apple could sign up content providers (including both KQED, Doug Kaye and NPR), support the various access control policies and user fee collection options, manage the annual subscriptions, etc. – and collect a sliver of the revenues along the way. Ideally, it would also manage the fee distribution splits among the various parties involved in bringing all of this content to life in my earphones – at a time when I want to listen to it.

Potential future metaphor:

iTunes is to podcasting as PayPal is to eBay.

As has been said many times before, we certainly do live in interesting times! And, can video (think The Newshour with Jim Lehrer or Charlie Rose) be far behind?

Categories
Web/Tech

File Sharing Update – FolderShare

Just noticed mention of FolderShare in one of the Mac blogs that I read regularly. From a quick read, this looks like it just might be what we’re looking for to replace Groove for our cross-platform file sharing needs.

Anybody out there using it care to comment?

Categories
Web/Tech

File Sharing Update – Eudora Sharing Protocol

Re my post last night about server-less file sharing, a friend writes:

I made good use of Eudora for this. It has does file sharing through servers, but unlike Groove, was asynchronous and runs on both the Mac and Windows.

Basically, you set up an email account for each person who wants to share folders. Then you go into Eudora and add an ESP folder, and invite the other Eudora users (the free version works, so just tell your friends to download it). The interaction is straightforward.

Turns out this has been available in Eudora since 2000!

Categories
Web/Tech

Some Reflections on the “Post-Email World”

Dave Winer‘s been preparing the launch of his new “instant outliner“. A couple of years ago, I participated in a Userland beta test where the first version of an instant outliner was available — and it provided me some truly new insights into real-time collaboration.

The key difference, for me anyway, was that Dave’s instant outliner had this special property of persistence, unlike instant messaging or email. By that I mean that I could be collaborating with others and both the real-time and, importantly, the “final” result would be visible to all. Indeed, that’s something that’s very difficult (impossible?) to achieve with IM or email!

It was also my experience that the “final” result was never really final, it just kept evolving. I might think the outline was final — but one of my collaborators might have a new tweak and make an improvement that we all could share.

Somewhere along the way, I read Ray Ozzie’s post about the “post-email world” and posted about it. Also along the way my partners and I adopted Ozzie’s Groove — as it turns out our use has largely been for an elegant solution to server-less file sharing. Ironically, an early version of Groove actually had a shared outliner built-in — but it was dropped in a release upgrade cycle somewhere along the way.

I was reminded about the “post-email world” notion today while reading an interview in Fortune of Gates and Ozzie in which they both talked about a post-email world. Unfortunately, the article’s mostly behind a subscription wall. (By the way, I keep an AOL account around for this among a couple of other silly purposes. It was the only aspect of the AOL/Time Warner “merger” that made sense to me — and probably about 56 others in the online world like me).

Anyway, here’s a key quote from that interview, Ray Ozzie speaking:

E-mail has become a victim of its own success. Whereas initially it might have been used to communicate a simple thought or a message from place to place, today people are using it to manage entire projects and teams. Funneling messages in chronological order into an in-box is not necessarily the best model for dealing with different projects, different teams, different issues, while other unrelated things get intermixed with those. You have no sense of the priorities.

That’s what instant outlining is all about — get a team to lift their heads out of their email in-box and focus on the end objectives (shared and agreed objectives indeed!).

I hope Dave has a big hit on his hands with his new instant outliner. Based on my experience, it’s truly a new way to collaborate — and one totally missing from the current tools. Not even wiki’s come close. But some of us need more. Instant outlining is necessary, but not sufficient.

Oh, while we still use Groove (some us using it via Virtual PC on Mac OS X), we’re now much hungrier for a true cross-platform server-less file sharing solution. We don’t use the rest of Groove’s fancier tools — file sharing (and, ideally, content-based searching ala Tiger’s Spotlight) is what we need. Frankly, Groove’s recent acquisition by Microsoft was a total turn off — at least for us Mac OS X fanactics! Maybe there’s a future for a BitTorrent-based small group cross-platform server-less file sharing collaboration tool? One that’s got the shared space granularity of Groove. Send me an
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if you know of a solution or want to help!

Categories
Web/Tech

Mossberg on Ministries

Soviet “ministries” that is.

A great column in today’s Wall St. Journal by Walt Mossberg on the wireless carriers and their lock on equipment — and the downstream negative impacts they have on innovation.

I believe that, in the name of valid business goals, the U.S. carriers are exercising far too much control over the flow of new technologies into users’ hands. In an ideal world, any tech company with a new cellphone, or with software to run on cellphones, should be able to sell it directly to users. These customers would then separately buy plans from the cellphone companies allowing those devices to work on the networks.

Feels like pressure’s a buildin’ and the time’s a comin’ for a new “Carterphone” decision — or for one of the carriers to break ranks, open up and encourage/capture the innovation that would result.

Categories
Web/Tech

Flying Up the Tailpipe

Cringely’s latest talks about Microsoft’s Xbox as a trojan horse PC:

Whatever the reason, there is no going back now: Microsoft is in direct competition with its own customers.