Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W275435907> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 72 of
72
with 100 items per page.
- W275435907 startingPage "387" @default.
- W275435907 abstract "I. INTRODUCTION Imagine you're at home eating a TV dinner just purchased from local grocery. Suddenly, a sly-looking store clerk appears in dining room window and starts taking pictures of you. Hey, buddy! complain, angrily pointing at the camera. gives the right to come in here with that thing? This is private property. Well, he replies, you bought those groceries at my store, see-and we have a right to keep our shelves stocked with the latest in popular consumer products. It's for own good, understand. He grins, and continues taking pictures of lawn, bathroom, bedroom, pantry, etc.1 It sounds like something out of a bad B-movie-the scary grocer digging through all of private belongings while stand by, unable to stop him from invading inch of personal space. It sounds like a bad movie, but it is not. It is the reality in most modem consumers live. When the U.S. Congress first implemented the Social Security system, citizens feared that the federal government would track them through their number.2 While that particular fear has, to a large extent, subsided, some citizens have become leery of a new menace-the menace of losing control over one's personal privacy. Unlike previous generations, advances in technology have given modern retailers the ability to gather every tidbit of relevant that consumers leave along the electronic paper trail.3 As a consumer in the modern age, one's personal preferences (everything from what type of deodorant one prefers to what restaurants a person frequents-even the preferences of a person's pet) are all being tracked.4 Unless one always pays in cash and does not possess a bank account, drive a car, surf the web, make phone calls, or use any type of service that requires a computer chip, your personal information, habits, and preferences are essentially fair game for anyone who wants to know about them.5 The growing concern over personal privacy has sparked a revolution of protection laws in many countries. While the European Union (EU) chooses to protect consumer personal information through legislation (i.e., the passage of directives and national laws), the United States chooses to protect consumer privacy through market mechanisms and the promotion of industry self-regulation. The following pages will examine the divergent paths these two entities have chosen and the successes and failures they have experienced in the pursuit of consumer privacy protection. The ultimate goal of this comment is to provide a checklist of issues to consider for nations that are now in the process of considering the creation of national consumer privacy protection policies. Part II will begin by examining the intersection between privacy and the Internet. What is privacy? How has the Internet changed the ability of consumers to protect their personal information? And how is consumer online privacy protection different from traditional consumer privacy protection? Parts III and IV will explore the history and the reasons for the diverging EU and U.S. policies toward personal privacy. Why have these entities chosen their particular paths? Part V will examine the successes and failures these two entities have experienced in their pursuit of privacy protection. Part VI will examine the lessons other nations should learn from these two examples. Is one method better than the other? Or should a nation choose some combination of these two methods to protect consumer privacy? What is the best path for a nation to choose? II. PRIVACY AND THE INTERNET If we are to understand the importance of consumer privacy online, we must first understand the importance of privacy. What is it and why is it important? In general, privacy can be divided into four major categories. For the purposes of this comment, privacy refers to informational privacy, or that which concerns the control or handling of personal data. …" @default.
- W275435907 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W275435907 creator A5076810814 @default.
- W275435907 date "2002-04-01" @default.
- W275435907 modified "2023-09-24" @default.
- W275435907 title "Private Eyes Are Watching You: Consumer Online Privacy Protection-Lessons from Home and Abroad" @default.
- W275435907 hasPublicationYear "2002" @default.
- W275435907 type Work @default.
- W275435907 sameAs 275435907 @default.
- W275435907 citedByCount "2" @default.
- W275435907 countsByYear W2754359072014 @default.
- W275435907 countsByYear W2754359072017 @default.
- W275435907 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W275435907 hasAuthorship W275435907A5076810814 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C108827166 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C112698675 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C127413603 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C144133560 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C147176958 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C2776003135 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C2778137410 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C2778289769 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C2994087961 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W275435907 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C108827166 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C112698675 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C127413603 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C138885662 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C144133560 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C147176958 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C17744445 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C199539241 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C2776003135 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C2778137410 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C2778289769 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C2994087961 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C41008148 @default.
- W275435907 hasConceptScore W275435907C41895202 @default.
- W275435907 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W275435907 hasLocation W2754359071 @default.
- W275435907 hasOpenAccess W275435907 @default.
- W275435907 hasPrimaryLocation W2754359071 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W130789376 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W1569322941 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W204319943 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2177345992 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2302485670 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W235822820 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2414386923 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2567209804 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2580080527 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W3017035658 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W3033671091 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W3122423505 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W3131886864 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W327098932 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W594979103 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W630301582 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W640901364 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W659566167 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2595398995 @default.
- W275435907 hasRelatedWork W2621313003 @default.
- W275435907 hasVolume "37" @default.
- W275435907 isParatext "false" @default.
- W275435907 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W275435907 magId "275435907" @default.
- W275435907 workType "article" @default.