How Privacy Vanishes Online

By STEVE LOHR
March 16, 2010

If a stranger came up to you on the street, would you give him your 
name, Social Security number and e-mail address?

Probably not.

Yet people often dole out all kinds of personal information on the 
Internet that allows such identifying data to be deduced. Services 
like Facebook, Twitter and Flickr are oceans of personal minutiae - 
birthday greetings sent and received, school and work gossip, photos 
of family vacations, and movies watched.

Computer scientists and policy experts say that such seemingly 
innocuous bits of self-revelation can increasingly be collected and 
reassembled by computers to help create a picture of a person's 
identity, sometimes down to the Social Security number.

"Technology has rendered the conventional definition of personally 
identifiable information obsolete," said Maneesha Mithal, associate 
director of the Federal Trade Commission's privacy division. "You can 
find out who an individual is without it."

In a class project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology that 
received some attention last year, Carter Jernigan and Behram Mistree 
analyzed more than 4,000 Facebook profiles of students, including 
links to friends who said they were gay. The pair was able to 
predict, with 78 percent accuracy, whether a profile belonged to a 
gay male.

So far, this type of powerful data mining, which relies on 
sophisticated statistical correlations, is mostly in the realm of 
university researchers, not identity thieves and marketers.

But the F.T.C. is worried that rules to protect privacy have not kept 
up with technology. The agency is convening on Wednesday the third of 
three workshops on the issue.

Its concerns are hardly far-fetched. Last fall, Netflix awarded $1 
million to a team of statisticians and computer scientists who won a 
three-year contest to analyze the movie rental history of 500,000 
subscribers and improve the predictive accuracy of Netflix's 
recommendation software by at least 10 percent.

On Friday, Netflix said that it was shelving plans for a second 
contest - bowing to privacy concerns raised by the F.T.C. and a 
private litigant. In 2008, a pair of researchers at the University of 
Texas showed that the customer data released for that first contest, 
despite being stripped of names and other direct identifying 
information, could often be "de-anonymized" by statistically 
analyzing an individual's distinctive pattern of movie ratings and 
recommendations.

In social networks, people can increase their defenses against 
identification by adopting tight privacy controls on information in 
personal profiles. Yet an individual's actions, researchers say, are 
rarely enough to protect privacy in the interconnected world of the 
Internet.

You may not disclose personal information, but your online friends 
and colleagues may do it for you, referring to your school or 
employer, gender, location and interests. Patterns of social 
communication, researchers say, are revealing.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/17/technology/17privacy.html

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