Computers, Privacy & the Constitution

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BrandonNguyenFirstPaper 3 - 26 Apr 2016 - Main.BrandonNguyen
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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

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Background

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On February 18, New York City Mayor Bill deBlasio announced the launch of LinkNYC? , the most ambitious municipal WiFi? project in United States history. Partnering with CityBridge? , a private sector consortium including QualComm? , CIVIQ Smartscapes, and Google-funded venture Intersection, New York would replace its outdated public phone booths with kiosks offering free encrypted WiFi? at (purportedly) gigabit speeds. Five hundred kiosks are to be rolled out by mid-2016, with plans for 4,500 total by 2019. The policy rationale behind such an expansive project is clear: making the net more accessible to low income New Yorkers who cannot afford traditional ISP services would improve access to information, services, and facilitate communication free of charge, all while shifting the cost burden from individuals to the larger community. From the city’s perspective, a better-connected, better-educated populace would enhance economic productivity, eventually boosting tax revenue. Yet, while the intentions behind LinkNYC? may indeed contemplate a more egalitarian public good, the program is not without privacy risks. Upon careful review of LinkNYC? ’s fine print, it becomes clear that users should still take precautions to protect their data in the near-term.
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On February 18, New York City Mayor Bill deBlasio announced the launch of LinkNYC? , the most ambitious municipal WiFi? project in United States history. Partnering with CityBridge? , a private sector consortium including QualComm? , CIVIQ Smartscapes, and Google-funded venture Intersection, New York would replace its outdated public phone booths with kiosks offering free encrypted WiFi? at (purportedly) gigabit speeds. Five hundred kiosks are to be rolled out by mid-2016, with plans for 4,500 total by 2019. The policy rationale behind such an expansive project is clear: making the net more accessible to low income New Yorkers who cannot afford traditional ISP services would improve access to information, services, and facilitate communication free of charge, all while shifting the cost burden from individuals to the larger community. From the city's perspective, a better-connected, better-educated populace would enhance economic productivity, eventually boosting tax revenue. Yet, while the intentions behind LinkNYC? may indeed contemplate a more egalitarian public good, the program is not without privacy risks. Upon careful review of LinkNYC? 's fine print, it becomes clear that users should still take precautions to protect their data in the near-term.
 

LinkNYC? and Privacy

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At its core, the debate surrounding municipal WiFi? programs like LinkNYC? revolves around the issue of control. Telecom giants with monopolies on regional markets routinely lobby against such proposals, ironically accusing municipalities of creating their own monopolies (e.g. Verizon’s opposition to Philadelphia’s city WiFi? plan). In making net access a public good without the need for ISP hardware, municipal WiFi? gives citizens at least the opportunity to connect to a network free from a business model predicated on the commodification of communication. This obviously runs counter to an ISP’s for-profit purpose, and that disconnect with municipalities’ objectives have scuttled similar public-private partnerships in the past.
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At its core, the debate surrounding municipal WiFi? programs like LinkNYC? revolves around the issue of control. Telecom giants with monopolies on regional markets routinely lobby against such proposals, ironically accusing municipalities of creating their own monopolies (e.g. Verizon's opposition to Philadelphia's city WiFi? plan). In making net access a public good without the need for ISP hardware, municipal WiFi? gives citizens at least the opportunity to connect to a network free from a business model predicated on the commodification of communication. This obviously runs counter to an ISP's for-profit purpose, and that disconnect with municipalities' objectives have scuttled similar public-private partnerships in the past.
 
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Unfortunately, LinkNYC? ’s privacy policy includes several alarmingly vague provisions concerning what kind of information CityBridge? would be able to collect, and how that collection process works. Users would first sign into kiosks with a username, email address, and password to access the network--information LinkNYC? can collect. LinkNYC? offers two network types: an open network, and a private network encrypting all traffic between devices and the Link kiosk. Ironically, “Private Network access is only available on Apple devices enabled with Hotspot 2.0 technology”, meaning private service would be restricted to iPhones with inbuilt surveillance features. Subsequently, LinkNYC? would be able to track browsing histories, including “pages you viewed or searched for; page response times, download errors, length of visits to certain pages, page interaction...” And although information will be encrypted in storage and cannot be sold or shared with third parties, LinkNYC? would be allowed to collect information to tailor advertisements to individual user profiles. On geolocation information, LinkNYC? makes clear that even though it cannot track precise locations, “we know where we provide WiFi? services, so when you use the Services we can determine your general location.” Such information, in combination with a kiosk’s environmental sensors and video footage, could be forwarded to “the City or governmental law enforcement,” who would then have access to private information about devices at any given location. Given these expansive provisions, it is clear that LinkNYC? ’s privacy policy allows for government exploitation. Another alarming aspect of LinkNYC? is the fact that a large volume of citizens’ private data will be aggregated and stored indefinitely, ripe for third party abuse. In fact, the privacy policy specifically provides for functionally indefinite storage: LinkNYC? “will make reasonable efforts to retain Personally Identifiable Information that you provide to us during registration no longer than 12 months after your last login.” For low income citizens using LinkNYC? in their daily lives, this effectively allows for indefinite data retention, as the 12 month period could be reset every time they use the service. Ultimately, rather than being an equalizing, liberating force for change, LinkNYC? ’s vague oversight structure could become a boon for monitoring low income populations already the most susceptible to surveillance. While it is too early to determine whether LinkNYC? constitutes a step closer to citizen-controlled access in spirit, in practice its underlying privacy policy has not yet been fully developed to afford current users adequate protection.
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Unfortunately, LinkNYC? 's privacy policy includes several alarmingly vague provisions concerning what kind of information CityBridge? would be able to collect, and how that collection process works. Users would first sign into kiosks with a username, email address, and password to access the network--information LinkNYC? can collect. LinkNYC? offers two network types: an open network, and a private network encrypting all traffic between devices and the Link kiosk. Ironically, "Private Network access is only available on Apple devices enabled with Hotspot 2.0 technology", meaning private service would be restricted to iPhones with inbuilt surveillance features. Subsequently, LinkNYC? would be able to track browsing histories, including "pages you viewed or searched for; page response times, download errors, length of visits to certain pages, page interaction..." And although information will be encrypted in storage and cannot be sold or shared with third parties, LinkNYC? would be allowed to collect information to tailor advertisements to individual user profiles. On geolocation information, LinkNYC? makes clear that even though it cannot track precise locations, "we know where we provide WiFi? services, so when you use the Services we can determine your general location." Such information, in combination with a kiosk's environmental sensors and video footage, could be forwarded to "the City or governmental law enforcement" who would then have access to private information about devices at any given location. Given these expansive provisions, it is clear that LinkNYC? 's privacy policy allows for government exploitation. Another alarming aspect of LinkNYC? is the fact that a large volume of citizens' private data will be aggregated and stored indefinitely, ripe for third party abuse. In fact, the privacy policy specifically provides for functionally indefinite storage: LinkNYC? "will make reasonable efforts to retain Personally Identifiable Information that you provide to us during registration no longer than 12 months after your last login." For low income citizens using LinkNYC? in their daily lives, this effectively allows for indefinite data retention, as the 12 month period could be reset every time they use the service. Ultimately, rather than being an equalizing, liberating force for change, LinkNYC? 's vague oversight structure could become a boon for monitoring low income populations already the most susceptible to surveillance. While it is too early to determine whether LinkNYC? constitutes a step closer to citizen-controlled access in spirit, in practice its underlying privacy policy has not yet been fully developed to afford current users adequate protection.
 

Solutions?

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Citizens are right to remain wary of centralized control of net access, and LinkNYC? is no less centralized than the status quo. But if New Yorkers are to take advantage of LinkNYC? , what specific measures can be undertaken to protect communications from third party eavesdropping? First, the public needs a deeper understanding of LinkNYC? ’s privacy risks; it starts with government transparency, but education and information dissemination also nurture a more cautious public. In addition, LinkNYC? ’s infrastructure is targeted predominantly at mobile phone users, whose devices inherently afford less privacy protection than traditional computers for a variety of reasons. Ditching smartphones for computers would reduce convenience, but would provide greater opportunity for users to control the output of information LinkNYC? could potentially process. In order to reduce unnecessary barriers to entry, it is therefore extremely crucial that computers become more affordable and usable vis-a-vis mobile phones for heavily-surveilled low income populations. Finally, the means of achieving communication privacy is within the capability of existing technology: simple VPNs, hardware like FreedomBox? , or similar devices equipped with free software could tap into public WiFi? to form a relatively low cost, open mesh of Internet coverage in major urban areas. As such devices gain traction in the market, lower prices will accompany their greater ubiquity. Perhaps one day, privacy-centered devices will run fully integrated with municipal WiFi? . Critics point to the technical difficulties of powering and maintaining municipal WiFi? , let alone a dense cluster of privacy-centered devices. Yet, if taxpayers sufficiently value privacy and an open Internet, they will demand cities provide supplementary infrastructure to revamp how people live and communicate in public life. This is perhaps the most critical step in the process, as it necessitates greater awareness, vocal activism, and a societal reprioritization of privacy rights.
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Citizens are right to remain wary of centralized control of net access, and LinkNYC? is no less centralized than the status quo. But if New Yorkers are to take advantage of LinkNYC? , what specific measures can be undertaken to protect communications from third party eavesdropping? First, the public needs a deeper understanding of LinkNYC? 's privacy risks; it starts with government transparency, but education and information dissemination also nurture a more cautious public. In addition, LinkNYC? 's infrastructure is targeted predominantly at mobile phone users, whose devices inherently afford less privacy protection than traditional computers for a variety of reasons. Ditching smartphones for computers would reduce convenience, but would provide greater opportunity for users to control the output of information LinkNYC? could potentially process. In order to reduce unnecessary barriers to entry, it is therefore extremely crucial that computers become more affordable and usable vis-a-vis mobile phones for heavily-surveilled low income populations. Finally, the means of achieving communication privacy is within the capability of existing technology: simple VPNs, hardware like FreedomBox? , or similar devices equipped with free software could tap into public WiFi? to form a relatively low cost, open mesh of Internet coverage in major urban areas. As such devices gain traction in the market, lower prices will accompany their greater ubiquity. Perhaps one day, privacy-centered devices will run fully integrated with municipal WiFi? . Critics point to the technical difficulties of powering and maintaining municipal WiFi? , let alone a dense cluster of privacy-centered devices. Yet, if taxpayers sufficiently value privacy and an open Internet, they will demand cities provide supplementary infrastructure to revamp how people live and communicate in public life. This is perhaps the most critical step in the process, as it necessitates greater awareness, vocal activism, and a societal reprioritization of privacy rights.
 

References


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