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Privacy and the Media


Privacy and the Media

Paperback by McStay, Andrew

Privacy and the Media

£35.99

ISBN:
9781473924932
Publication Date:
6 Apr 2017
Language:
English
Publisher:
Sage Publications Ltd
Pages:
224 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 12 May 2024
Privacy and the Media

Description

Questions of privacy are critical to the study of contemporary media and society. When we're more and more connected to devices and to content, it's increasingly important to understand how information about ourselves is being collected, transmitted, processed, and mediated. Privacy and the Media equips students to do just that, providing a comprehensive overview of both the theory and reality of privacy and the media in the 21st Century. Offering a rich overview of this crucial and topical relationship, Andy McStay: Explores the foundational topics of journalism, the Snowden leaks, and encryption by companies such as Apple Considers commercial applications including behavioural advertising, big data, algorithms, and the role of platforms such as Google and Facebook Introduces the role of the body with discussions of emotion, wearable media, peer-based privacy, and sexting Encourages students to put their understanding to work with suggestions for further research, challenging them to explore how privacy functions in practice. Privacy and the Media is not a polemic on privacy as 'good' or 'bad', but a call to assess the detail and the potential implications of contemporary media technologies and practices. It is essential reading for students and researchers of digital media, social media, digital politics, and the creative and cultural industries. 'Privacy and the Media is a thoughtful survey of the privacy landscape. McStay reviews the intricate tensions and seeming contradictions to offer an accessible book for anyone curious about the contemporary debates in privacy.' - danah boyd, author of It's Complicated and founder of Data & Society 'McStay's great achievement here is to confront many of the pertinent and complex questions about media and privacy in a style that is both authoritative and easy to read... His book will prove an excellent companion for all students of this fascinating and crucial topic.' - Mireille Hildebrandt, Vrije Universiteit Brussel 'Clearly and accessibly written, this book is a great resource for anyone interested in the broad range of ways in which privacy and contemporary media are entangled and in the big picture of privacy/media relations today... I will definitely be assigning it for my students.' - Helen Kennedy, University of Sheffield

Contents

1. Introduction PART I: Journalism, Surveillance and Politics of Encryption 2. Nothing to hide, nothing to fear: myth and Western roots of privacy 3. Journalism: a complex relationship with privacy 4. The Snowden leaks: a call for better surveillance 5. Encryption: simultaneously public and private PART II: Commercial dimensions of privacy and media 7. Behavioural and programmatic advertising: consent, data alienation and problems with Marx 8. The right to be forgotten: memory, deletion and expression 9. Big data: machine learning and the politics of algorithms PART III: The role of the body 10. Empathic media: towards ubiquitous emotional intelligence 11. Re-introducing the Body: intimate and wearable media 12. Being young and social: inter-personal privacy and debunking seclusion 13. Sexting: exposure, protocol and collective privacy 14. Conclusion: what do media developments tell us about privacy?

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