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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter March 16, 2019

Contextual Integrity Up and Down the Data Food Chain

  • Helen Nissenbaum

Abstract

According to the theory of contextual integrity (CI), privacy norms prescribe information flows with reference to five parameters — sender, recipient, subject, information type, and transmission principle. Because privacy is grasped contextually (e.g., health, education, civic life, etc.), the values of these parameters range over contextually meaningful ontologies — of information types (or topics) and actors (subjects, senders, and recipients), in contextually defined capacities. As an alternative to predominant approaches to privacy, which were ineffective against novel information practices enabled by IT, CI was able both to pinpoint sources of disruption and provide grounds for either accepting or rejecting them. Mounting challenges from a burgeoning array of networked, sensor-enabled devices (IoT) and data-ravenous machine learning systems, similar in form though magnified in scope, call for renewed attention to theory. This Article introduces the metaphor of a data (food) chain to capture the nature of these challenges. With motion up the chain, where data of higher order is inferred from lower-order data, the crucial question is whether privacy norms governing lower-order data are sufficient for the inferred higher-order data. While CI has a response to this question, a greater challenge comes from data primitives, such as digital impulses of mouse clicks, motion detectors, and bare GPS coordinates, because they appear to have no meaning. Absent a semantics, they escape CI’s privacy norms entirely.


* Information Science, Cornell Tech, NYC. Author gratefully acknowledges grants from US NSF CNS-1801501, CNS-1704527, SES1642553, SES1537324, and NSA H98230-18-D-006. This work has benefited from exposure at several events, principally, Tel Aviv University, Conference on Theorizing Privacy, Apple University, EPFL, and CCS 2018. It reflects incisive comments from colleagues and collaborators -- Sebastian Benthall, Anupam Datta, Seda Guerses, Kirsten Martin, Vitaly Shmatikov, Michael Tschantz and, particularly Michael Birnhack and Julie Cohen for urging me forward. Enormous credit goes to the editors of Theoretical Inquiries in Law for a remarkable job on substantive and stylistic matters. Finally, thanks to Katherine Magruder for stellar research assistance at all stages.

Cite as: Helen Nissenbaum, Contextual Integrity Up and Down the Data Food Chain, 20 THEORETICAL INQUIRIES L. 221 (2019).


Published Online: 2019-03-16

© 2019 by Theoretical Inquiries in Law

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