Privacy is Dead!
Long Live Privacy
Edited by:
Series:
Index on Censorship
Index on Censorship
June 2011 | 192 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Who needs privacy? It's a human right that isn't just a concern for the rich and powerful wishing to shield their private lives from the media. Today, it's an urgent issue for anyone who communicates online. Index on Censorship assesses the threats
to our data, considers the impact of tabloid exposés on press standards, explores the world of internet trolls and talks to the UK's leading privacy judge about striking the balance.
Index on Censorship is an award-winning magazine, devoted to protecting and promoting free expression. International in outlook, outspoken in comment, Index on Censorship reports on free expression violations around the world, publishes banned writing and shines a light on vital free expression issues through original, challenging and intelligent commentary and analysis, publishing some of the world's finest writers.
Winner 2008 Amnesty International Consumer Magazine of the Year
Jo Glanville
PART ONE: DISPATCHES
Ibrahim Eissa
Mubarak's Nemesis: An Interview with Egypt's Most Outspoken Journalist
Yoani Sánchez
Living the Life: Blogging Under Pressure in Cuba
PART TWO: PRIVACY IS DEAD
Brian Cathcart
Code Breakers: It's Time to Reclaim Journalism from the Privacy Invaders
Joshua Rozenberg
In the Balance: An Interview with Sir David Eady, the UK's Leading Privacy Judge
Natasha Lehrer
D'Artagnan's Tune: France's Reverence for Privacy is Under Challenge
Whitney Phillips
Meet the Trolls: An Insider's View on the Game for Lulz
Peter Fleischer
Private Lives: Google's Privacy Chief Talks to Index
Martin Rowson
Stripsearch
Gus Hosein and Eric King
Age of Insecurity: Time For a New Debate to Protect our Data
Simon Davies and Eric King
How to Use Facebook (Safely): A Guide for Users
Birgitta Jónsdóttir
Friends, Citizens, Users: Netizens Need to Fight for Their Rights
Paul Bernal
Web Spies: Who's Tracking Who Online
Marc Rotenberg
Strictly Personal: A Test Case for Transparency
Prashant Iyengar
Strange Fruit: India's Attempt to Keep BlackBerry In Line