Question 1 10 Points Give an example of a piece of informati
Question 1 (10 Points): Give an example of a piece of information that a person should not have to reveal to anyone else. Give an example of a piece of information that society should be able to demand that a person reveal.
Question 2 (10 Points): This is the Election 2016 season in the US. Republican and Democrat National conventions just got over. Please do some research and explain how are the political campaigns using data mining?
Question 3 (10 Points): Google Glass provides an information display in eyeglass frames, making it easier for people to view information while on the go. Instead of having to look at the screen of a tablet or smartphone, Google Glass users can see text and images displayed in their field of vision. Google Glass also contains a camera and a microphone, enabling users to take photos and shoot videos from a first-person perspective. Do you believe Google Glass represents a significant new threat to privacy? Under what circumstances, if any, is it inappropriate for someone to wear Google Glass?
Question 4 (10 Points): How could “cookies” created by aWeb server affect a computer user’s privacy?
Question 5 (10 Points): Give three examples of how data mining is being used on information collected from social networks.
Solution
Answer:
1)Examples:
a) Privacy: What information about one\'s self or one\'s associations must a person reveal to others, under what conditions and with what safeguards? What things can people keep to themselves and not be forced to reveal to others?
b)Accuracy:Misinformation has a way of fouling up people\'s lives, especially when the party with the inaccurate information has an advantage in power and authority.
c) Property:
=>One of the most complex issues we face as a society is the question of intellectual property rights. There are substantial economic and ethical concerns surrounding these right
d)Access:
=> Our main avenue to information is through literacy. Literacy, when the Syrians first conceived a consonant alphabet, has been a requirement for full participation in the fabric of society
3) Google glass
=> google Glass takes photos and videos, sends text messages, engages in FaceTime-like Google Hangouts, makes phone calls, searches Google, and gets turn-by-turn navigation with maps.
=> The main aim of the movement is to stop a future in which privacy is impossible and where the iron cage of surveillance, calculation and control pervades every aspect of life.\"
failures:
=> Google Glass is a breakthrough concept, but it involves wearing a camera on your face, saying things like “OK, Google,” out loud, and walking around like it’s cool to do those things in public.
=> But, of course, it’s not cool. In fact, wearing Google Glass out in the world makes everyone else uncomfortable.
4)How could “cookies” created by aWeb server affect a computer user’s privacy?
cookie:Cookies are small text files that reside on your computer, and the information they contain is set and accessed by the servers of the websites that you visit. Cookies allow servers to identify you and remember things about you.
==> if someone else should steal your \"cookie\" they can impersonate you.
5)Give three examples of how data mining is being used on information collected from social networks.
Examples:
A) cell Phone companies are using data mining on social networks to identify \"influencers\" and offer them incentives to keep them loyal.
B)Police are using data mining on sical networks to identify when big parties are happening and deploy officers accrodingly.
C) Banks are using data minin g to evaluate riskiness of loans.

