3 Public Health 3 Public Health
3.1 Week 5: Encryption and Surveillance 3.1 Week 5: Encryption and Surveillance
3.1.1 Why Privacy Matters 3.1.1 Why Privacy Matters
3.1.1.1. “'I've Got Nothing to Hide' and Other Misunderstandings of Privacy” by Daniel J. Solove, 44 San Diego L. Rev. 745, (2007)
28 PAGES
3.1.2 The Crypto Wars 3.1.2 The Crypto Wars
3.1.2.1. “Battle of the Clipper Chip” by Stephen Levy, New York Times (1994).
25 PAGES
3.1.2.2. “Doomed to Repeat History? Lessons from the Crypto Wars of the 1990s” by Danielle Kehl, Andi Wilson, and Kevin Bankston, New America (2015)
Read Executive Summary. 3 PAGES
3.1.3 Going Dark? 3.1.3 Going Dark?
3.1.3.1. “Going Dark: Are Technology, Privacy, and Public Safety on a Collision Course?” by James Comey, Speech to Brookings Institution (2014)
11 PAGES
3.1.3.2. “Don’t Panic: Making Progress on the Going Dark Debate” by Jonathan Zittrain et al., Berkman Klein Center (2016)
15 PAGES
3.1.3.3. “A Few Keystrokes Could Solve the Crime. Would You Press Enter?” by Jonathan Zittrain, Just Security (2016)
8 PAGES
3.1.3.4. “The FBI Wanted a Back Door to the iPhone. Tim Cook Said No” by Leander Kahney, Wired (2019)
10 PAGES
3.1.3.5. “Lawful Hacking: Using Existing Vulnerabilities for Wiretapping on the Internet” by Steven Bellovin et al., Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property (2014)
Abstract, Introduction, III, VI, Conclusion. 22 PAGES
3.2 Week 6: Advertising and Manipulation 3.2 Week 6: Advertising and Manipulation
3.2.1 The Architecture of Advertising 3.2.1 The Architecture of Advertising
3.2.1.1. “Re-Thinking the Network Economy: The True Forces That Drive the Digital Marketplace” by Stan Liebowitz, AMACOM (2002). Chapter 6: “Can Advertising Revenues Support the Net?”
Read 6 Intro and 6 part D. 11 PAGES
3.2.1.2. “Behind the One-Way Mirror: A Deep Dive Into the Technology of Corporate Surveillance” by Bennett Cyphers and Gennie Gebhart, EFF (2019)
Part 4 optional. 32 PAGES
3.2.1.3. “Big other: surveillance capitalism and the prospects of an information civilization” by Shoshana Zuboff, Journal of Information Technology (2015)
22 PAGES
3.2.2 Advertising Gone Too Far? 3.2.2 Advertising Gone Too Far?
3.2.2.1. “Facebook Lets Advertisers Exclude Users by Race” by Julia Angwin, ProPublica (2018)
3 PAGES
3.2.2.2. “'It might work too well': the dark art of political advertising online” by Julia Carrie Wong, The Guardian (2018)
8 PAGES
3.2.2.3. “Advertising in Young Children’s Apps” by Marissa Mayer et al., Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics (2019)
Read Introduction, Results, Discussion. 8 PAGES
3.2.3 Ad Blocking 3.2.3 Ad Blocking
3.2.3.1. “Sen. Ron Wyden calls for an investigation of the ad-blocking industry” by Makena Kelly, The Verge (2020)
3 PAGES
3.2.3.2. “Google Says it Isn’t Killing Ad Blockers. Ad Blockers Disagree.” by Lily Hay Newman, WIRED (2019)
4 PAGES
3.3 Week 7: Hate Speech and Harassment 3.3 Week 7: Hate Speech and Harassment
3.3.1 Harmful Content 3.3.1 Harmful Content
3.3.1.1. “LOLing at Tragedy: Facebook trolls, memorial pages, and resistance to grief online” by Whitney Phillips, First Monday (2011)
11 PAGES
3.3.1.2. “It Wasn’t Just the Trolls: Early Internet Culture, “Fun,” and the Fires of Exclusionary Laughter” by Whitney Phillips, Social Media + Society (2019)
4 PAGES
3.3.1.3. “Extremist Speech, Compelled Conformity, and Censorship Creep” by Danielle Keats Citron, Notre Dame Law Review (2018)
36 PAGES
3.3.1.4. “Sexual Privacy” by Danielle Keats Citron, Yale Law Journal (2019)
Read 1874-1881, 1908-1928, 1944-1953, 1955-1960 43 PAGES
3.3.2 Content Moderation 3.3.2 Content Moderation
3.3.2.1. Custodians of the Internet by Tarleton Gillespie, Yale University Press (2018)
Chapter 2. 20 PAGES
3.4 Week 8: Disinformation and Propaganda 3.4 Week 8: Disinformation and Propaganda
3.4.1 Political Propaganda and Election Influence 3.4.1 Political Propaganda and Election Influence
3.4.1.1. “Facebook, Elections and Political Speech” by Nick Clegg (2019)
7 PAGES
3.4.1.2. “A Jury of Random People Can Do Wonders for Facebook” by Jonathan Zittrain, The Atlantic (2019)
4 PAGES
3.4.1.3. [READ EXECUTIVE SUMMARY, SKIM REMAINDER] “The IRA, Social Media and Political Polarization in the United States, 2012-2018” by Philip N. Howard et al., Oxford Internet Institute and Graphika (2018)
23 PAGES
3.4.2 Does Political Disinformation Work? 3.4.2 Does Political Disinformation Work?
3.4.2.1. Network Propaganda by Yochai Benkler, Robert Faris, and Hal Roberts, Oxford University Press (2018)
Read 45-56, 75-85, 235-236, 254-268, 381-387. 45 PAGES
3.4.2.2. “On Digital Disinformation and Democratic Myths” by David Karpf, Media Well (2019)
5 PAGES
3.4.3 Vaccine Misinformation 3.4.3 Vaccine Misinformation
3.4.3.1. [OPTIONAL] “Weaponized Health Communication: Twitter Bots and Russian Trolls Amplify the Vaccine Debate” by David A. Broniatowski et al., American Journal of Public Health (2018)
10 PAGES
3.4.3.2. [OPTIONAL] “It’s not all about autism: The emerging landscape of anti-vaccination sentiment on Facebook” by Beth L. Hoffman et al., Vaccine (2019)
6 PAGES