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Communication Technologies on Trial Day 5 - Privacy, Security and Surveillance

When:
Venue: Birkbeck Clore Management Centre

No booking required

Communication Technologies on Trial Day 5 - Privacy, Security and Surveillance

On Friday 14 June, we will turn to a set of critical questions around privacy, security and surveillance. Is Super Sibling really watching us? Why? What does s/he want to know? Is it for our own good? Who is s/he anyway? All these are questions about the exercise and control of power that have always demanded responses in a democratic society. Does the legal system need to give different answers to them in the digital age?

Speakers

Chair: Bernard Keenan, Birkbeck

Manu Luksch, Artist, filmmaker and researcher - 'The Dissent Algorithm'

John Naughton, University of Cambridge - 'The Political Economy of Surveillance' 

Annie Ring, UCL - 'Complicity in the Age of Mass Dataveillance'

Gracie Bradley, Liberty - 'Data Protection in a Hostile Environment'

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Law on Trial 2019: Communication Technologies on Trial

Join us at our other Communication Technologies on Trial events

Monday 10 June Democracy

Tuesday 11 June Social and Financial Exclusion

Wednesday 12 June Cultural Production

Thursday 13 June Work and the Environment

The theme of this year's Law on Trial week is Communication Technologies on Trial. Through a series of focused debates, we will investigate the implications of the fact that communications technology, which is often used as though it were a public good, is privately owned and that the major actors and platforms that connect the infrastructure to the users are also transnational corporate interests. In particular, the week's events will focus on the ways that the architecture of the communications technology system poses serious challenges to legal regulation, while the dominance of neo-liberal thought arguably creates political resistance to regulatory solutions. Communication Technologies on Trial will investigate these issues through a range of presentations, panel discussions and public debates that focus on the sub-themes of democracy, social and financial exclusion, cultural production, work and the environment, and security, privacy and surveillance. It is jointly organized with the Velux funded digital humanities project "The Past's Future", which is based at the Saxo Institute and the School of Law at the University of Copenhagen. Find out more.

This event is free to attend and open to the public however booking is required via this page.

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