Thursday, December 11, 2008

Privacy concerns-1

There are also privacy and human rights concerns associated with data mining, specifically regarding the source of the data analyzed. Data mining provides information that may be difficult to obtain otherwise. When the data collected involves individual people, there are many questions concerning privacy, legality, and ethics. In particular, data mining government or commercial data sets for national security or law enforcement purposes, such as in the Total Information Awareness Program, has raised privacy concerns.

The following facts have increased the urgency and difficulty regarding data mining and protecting the privacy of the individuals about whom the data was collected: the decreased cost of data mining tools and the prevalence of those tools, an increase in the amount of data being collected and stored, an increase in the use of data aggregation, and the use of data warehouses as the stores for the data from several sources.

“Data mining by itself is ethically neutral”. There are several ethical issues which are raised by the topic of data mining: “the suitability and validity of the methods used in any given data mining application, the degree to which confidentiality and privacy obligations are respected, and the overall aims of a given data mining application”.

One must take into consideration the reliability of the source of the data which is being mined, the reason that the data was collected originally, and any aggregation that has taken place A danger which is inherent to data mining projects is the possibility of erroneous information resulting from data aggregation. Data aggregation is when the data which has been mined, possibly from various sources, has been put together so that it can be analyzed.

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