BrokenHalo writes with a story at New Scientist outlining one approach to reclaiming your online privacy: a software gatekeeper (described in detail in a paper from last year) from two MIT developers. “Developers Sandy Pentland and Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye claim OpenPDS (PDF) disrupts what NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden called the ‘architecture of oppression,’ by letting users see and control any third-party requests for their information – whether that’s from the NSA or Google. Among other things, the Personal Data Store includes a mechanism for fine-grained management of permissions for sharing of data. Personally, I’m not convinced that what the NSA demands outright to be shared is as relevant as what they surreptitiously take without asking.”… BrokenHalo writes with a story at New Scientist outlining one approach to reclaiming your online privacy: a software gatekeeper (described in detail in a paper from last year) from two MIT developers. “Developers Sandy Pentland and Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye claim OpenPDS (PDF) disrupts what NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden called the ‘architecture of oppression,’ by letting users see and control any third-party requests for their information – whether that’s from the NSA or Google. Among other things, the Personal Data Store includes a mechanism for fine-grained management of permissions for sharing of data. Personally, I’m not convinced that what the NSA demands outright to be shared is as relevant as what they surreptitiously take without asking.”

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