Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?

Personal information management systems (PIMS) aka personal data stores (PDSs) represent an emerging class of technology that seeks to empower individuals regarding their data. Presented as an alternative to current ‘centralised’ data processing approaches, whereby user data is (rather opaquely) col...

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Main Authors: Heleen Janssen, Jennifer Cobbe, Jatinder Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2020-12-01
Series:Internet Policy Review
Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/1536
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spelling doaj-96f399f0a05946c085df59c65dc4523b2021-06-01T12:40:30ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752020-12-01Volume 9Issue 410.14763/2020.4.1536Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?Heleen Janssen0Jennifer Cobbe1Jatinder Singh2University of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgeUniversity of CambridgePersonal information management systems (PIMS) aka personal data stores (PDSs) represent an emerging class of technology that seeks to empower individuals regarding their data. Presented as an alternative to current ‘centralised’ data processing approaches, whereby user data is (rather opaquely) collected and processed by organisations, PDSs provide users with technical mechanisms for aggregating and managing their own data, determining when and with whom their data is shared, and the computation that may occur over that data. Though arguments for decentralisation may be appealing, there are questions regarding the extent to which PDSs actually address data processing concerns. This paper explores these questions from the perspective of PDS users. Specifically, we focus on data protection, including how PDSs relate to rights and the legal bases for processing, as well as how PDSs affect the information asymmetries and surveillance practices inherent online. We show that, despite the purported benefits of PDSs, many of the systemic issues of online/data ecosystems remain.https://policyreview.info/node/1536
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heleen Janssen
Jennifer Cobbe
Jatinder Singh
spellingShingle Heleen Janssen
Jennifer Cobbe
Jatinder Singh
Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
Internet Policy Review
author_facet Heleen Janssen
Jennifer Cobbe
Jatinder Singh
author_sort Heleen Janssen
title Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
title_short Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
title_full Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
title_fullStr Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
title_full_unstemmed Personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
title_sort personal information management systems: a user-centric privacy utopia?
publisher Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society
series Internet Policy Review
issn 2197-6775
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Personal information management systems (PIMS) aka personal data stores (PDSs) represent an emerging class of technology that seeks to empower individuals regarding their data. Presented as an alternative to current ‘centralised’ data processing approaches, whereby user data is (rather opaquely) collected and processed by organisations, PDSs provide users with technical mechanisms for aggregating and managing their own data, determining when and with whom their data is shared, and the computation that may occur over that data. Though arguments for decentralisation may be appealing, there are questions regarding the extent to which PDSs actually address data processing concerns. This paper explores these questions from the perspective of PDS users. Specifically, we focus on data protection, including how PDSs relate to rights and the legal bases for processing, as well as how PDSs affect the information asymmetries and surveillance practices inherent online. We show that, despite the purported benefits of PDSs, many of the systemic issues of online/data ecosystems remain.
url https://policyreview.info/node/1536
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