Historical Lessons on Privacy Violations in Emergency Responses
This chapter explores the concern of emergency responses violating privacy and important values, citing examples from history such as the book 'Doctrine of Shock' by Noamie Klein, and the lasting effects of monitoring tools introduced during the Beijing Olympics and the world Expo in Shanghai. It also discusses the loss of privacy without significant security due to legislations passed after 9/11.
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How do we get back to normal after the COVID-19 pandemic? One suggestion is that we use increased amounts of surveillance and tracking to identify and isolate infected and at-risk persons. While this might be a valid public health strategy it does raise some tricky ethical questions. In this episode I talk to Carissa Véliz about these questions. Carissa is a Research Fellow at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at Oxford and the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities, also at Oxford. She is the editor of the Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics as well as two forthcoming solo-authored books Privacy is Power (Transworld) and The Ethics of Privacy (Oxford University Press).