DARPA anunció hoy sus planes para investigar y desarrollar herramientas para la privacidad en línea. Entre ellos está el Programa Brandeis que busca construir "sistemas de información que puedan asegurar los datos privados y sólo puedan utilizarse para los fines previstos y no otro".
DARPA es la sigla de la Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Agencia de Proyectos de Investigación Avanzados de Defensa), una agencia del Departamento de Defensa de Estados Unidos responsable del desarrollo de nuevas tecnologías para uso militar.
Visto en Wikipedia |
El programa es llamado Brandeis, en honor al ex magistrado del Tribunal Supremo Louis Brandeis, quien, cuando era estudiante en la escuela de leyes de Harvard, co-desarrolló el concepto de "derecho a la privacidad".
Más información en:
DARPA “Brandeis” Program Aims to Ensure Online Privacy Through Technology.
DARPA announced plans today to research and develop tools for online privacy, one of the most vexing problems facing the connected world as devices and data proliferate beyond a capacity to be managed responsibly. Named for former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who while a student at Harvard law school co-developed the concept of a “right to privacy” in a seminal article under that title, the new program seeks to explore how users can understand, interact with and control data in their systems and in cyberspace through the expression of simple intentions that reflect purpose, acceptable risk and intended benefits such as "only share photos with approved family and friends”. By DARPA.-
The Military's New Bid to Protect Your Data.
DARPA is tackling online privacy. But can you trust them? The average, technologically connected American worker produces some 5,000 megabytes of digital data a day, enough to fill nine CD-ROMs. Only a small fraction of it is stored permanently or is clearly related to a specific identity, but the sheer volume of digital exhaust that is daily life has turned privacy into an endangered entity–and a growing national security concern.
On Wednesday, the military’s Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency, orDARPA, put out an agency announcement on a program that seeks to restore some semblance of privacy to the online world. The so-called Brandeis program, named after the late U.S. Supreme Court associate justice and privacy advocate Louis Brandeis, seeks to build “information systems that can ensure private data can only be used for its intended purpose and no other”. By Cybersecurity Report.-
DARPA announced plans today to research and develop tools for online privacy, one of the most vexing problems facing the connected world as devices and data proliferate beyond a capacity to be managed responsibly. Named for former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who while a student at Harvard law school co-developed the concept of a “right to privacy” in a seminal article under that title, the new program seeks to explore how users can understand, interact with and control data in their systems and in cyberspace through the expression of simple intentions that reflect purpose, acceptable risk and intended benefits such as "only share photos with approved family and friends”. By DARPA.-
The Military's New Bid to Protect Your Data.
DARPA is tackling online privacy. But can you trust them? The average, technologically connected American worker produces some 5,000 megabytes of digital data a day, enough to fill nine CD-ROMs. Only a small fraction of it is stored permanently or is clearly related to a specific identity, but the sheer volume of digital exhaust that is daily life has turned privacy into an endangered entity–and a growing national security concern.
On Wednesday, the military’s Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency, orDARPA, put out an agency announcement on a program that seeks to restore some semblance of privacy to the online world. The so-called Brandeis program, named after the late U.S. Supreme Court associate justice and privacy advocate Louis Brandeis, seeks to build “information systems that can ensure private data can only be used for its intended purpose and no other”. By Cybersecurity Report.-
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