Presented by: Terence Craig, Mary Ludloff
Duration: Approximately 60 minutes.
Cost: Free
We all know that digital data is increasing at an exponential rate driven by all the devices we use, ubiquitous networks, social media, and emerging technologies like the Internet of Things. But what is not well understood is how the components of big data, in the form of cheap storage, increased CPU power,...
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Presented by: Terence Craig, Mary Ludloff
Duration: Approximately 60 minutes.
Cost: Free
We all know that digital data is increasing at an exponential rate driven by all the devices we use, ubiquitous networks, social media, and emerging technologies like the Internet of Things. But what is not well understood is how the components of big data, in the form of cheap storage, increased CPU power, and new algorithms, have changed the privacy landscape. Today, the aggregation and analysis of data is commonplace. Predictive models are used to predict your buying behavior or flag you as a possible criminal or terrorist. In this webcast, Terence Craig and Mary Ludloff, authors of Privacy and Big Data, ask and answer this question: What level of privacy do you really have in the age of big data? Get their take on the privacy debate from a number of different perspectives:
The surprising ways that data is collected and used.
The main privacy players and the business models that drive them.
Some approaches to maintaining your privacy and their effectiveness.
Join Terence and Mary as they consider whether the big data age has ended privacy as we know it.