Aren't compelled to read privacy policies and service agreements? Then read Weapons of Math Destruction instead. It's far more readable and just as relevant. O'Neil highlights the business practices that circumvent federal regulations and protections via data science. I think the new California Consumer Privacy Act, for instance, provides privacy safeguards, but O'Neil's solutions are implementable with or without legislation.
What I like most about WMD is that O'Neil gives the strong and weak methods for the mathematical/statistical models behind their algorithms.
A book review of Weapons of Math Destruction: How Big Data Increases Inequality and Threatens Democracy (Cathy O'Neil)
Jubalyn ExWilliams lives in Pennsylvania (United States). You can find her reviews on books from the Dauphin County Library System, including one on Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil, at landturn.com/reviews.
Related: Making sense of the encryption algorithm in cybersecurity (2021)
Related: Certified Privacy Professional (2021) Related: "Toxic Inequality" (Shapiro) (2020) Related: Ecosia over Google (2020) Related: No, you're IP address isn't private info (2021) Related: Edward Snowden's "Permanent Record" (2020) Related: Authors (Active)
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