42 Pages Posted: 28 Dec 2017
Date Written: May 1, 2017
Projected benefits of data science and the paradigm of big data
are incompatible with the regulation of information collection,
according to the requirements of privacy. So goes a compelling
and popular position that I have labelled big data
exceptionalism. My article traces the debate between those who
would forgo privacy in favor of use regulation and those who
continue to assert the affirmative value of constraints on
collection in the name of privacy. I challenge big data
exceptionalism. First, it plays suspiciously well with the
business model of dominant commercial incumbants, which rankles
at any effort to contain their practices. More importantly,
however, big data exceptionalism relies on misconceptions and
ambiguities of key terms and is propped up by grossly flawed
arguments and exaggerated claims of what is at stake for the
public interest. Although there is no denying the many benefits
of data science as well as its perplexing and unprecedented
challenges to privacy, big data exceptionalism offers no
guarantee of the former while it undermines a cornerstone of
individual freedom and social integrity.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3092282