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A Metric of Individual Privacy in the Information Age


In this brief essay I present a metric suitable for addressing the hypothesis that ?individual privacy has been eroding since the advent of the second Industrial Revolution.? By ?second Industrial Revolution? I understand to be the period of 1860?1900, where many new technologies, including electricity, were invented.

The metric I propose is to measure the number of ?private data records? that exist for a particular individual, i.e. that contain information that the individual would consider to be ?private?. Additionally, we should measure how many groups/people have access to these data records, and how many of these groups/people share or access the information without the individual?s consent. Other important factors to measure are: the average lifetime of a particular record, and the amount of time required to access a particular record.

For example, in 1860, before the advent of computer databases, governments and organizations kept data records about individuals, usually in the form of paper files. Such records wo... [to view the full essay now, purchase below]

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