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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Annals of the Association of American GeographersVolume 87 Issue 4, Pages 681 - 699 Published Online: 5 Nov 2004 © 2007 by Association of American Geographers
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 161K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The Digital Individual and the Private Realm Copyright Association of American Geographers 1997 KEYWORDS Geographic information systems • geodemographics • privacy • surveillance • law • technological change ABSTRACTGeographic information systems and the technological family associated with them—global positioning systems, geodemographics, and remote surveillance systems—raise important questions with respect to the issue of privacy. Of most immediate import, the systems store and represent data in ways that render ineffective the most popular safeguards against privacy abuse. But the systems are associated with more fundamental changes in the right to privacy and even, some would say, with challenges to the possibility of privacy itself. They make reasonable and acceptable the view that technological change is inevitable and autonomous, and therefore, too, are the development of increasingly comprehensive dossiers on individuals and households and the use of increasingly powerful means for the technological enhancements of vision. And their use in the creation of data profiles supports a wide-ranging reconceptualization of community, place, and individual. Nonetheless, in the ways they create and use digital profiles, the systems do offer suggestions for a partial remedy to the problems that they have created. |