Ethics for the working mathematician, Seminar 3: Cryptography, surveillance and privacy
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If you have a question about this talk, please contact Sae Koyama.
Mathematicians have always played a central role in the making, and
breaking, of cryptography. We also play a key role in developing
surveillance tools, both for state actors and private organisations. Thus,
we have several ways of enabling the infringement of the privacy of
others. We can do so deliberately, by designing tools to break strong
encryption, or indirectly, by creating systems and platforms which collect
massive amounts of personal data of individuals. And we can do it
accidentally, by being careless or sloppy in the way we store the data of
others. In all of these cases, our work determines how much privacy people
can have.
This talk is part of the C.U. Ethics in Mathematics Society (CUEiMS) series.
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