Archive for Category: ‘News’


Technological Somnambulism Revisited: Sleeping through the new invisible surveillance technologies

Tolu Odumosu | 31 December 2012 | Respond

A few months ago, I discovered that my excessive fatigue and uneasy sleep were caused by an underlying condition of severe sleep apnea. This malady causes one to stop breathing while sleeping. Humans of course, need to breathe, so the end result is that sufferers keep waking up every 5 minutes or so to restart the breathing process, all the while remaining blissfully unaware of multiple interruptions to their sleep. That is, until the fatigue begins upon waking. In my case, the recommended treatment was a CPAP (Continuous Positive Airways Pressure) machine. The CPAP machine, which is basically a refined air blower with a mask attached, has made a tremendous difference to my quality of life. Provided I use it as directed, I am actually able to get some sleep while sleeping.

My first appointment to see the sleep physician after six months of using the machine is when I discovered that my new medical device had been spying on me from the day I brought it home. Upon taking the machine in with me (as requested by my doctor’s office), I discovered to my immense shock that my machine was fitted with a small removable data card which the attendant readily removed and relieved of accumulated data shortly before I began my meeting with the doctor. During our conversation, I was asked how many hours of sleep I was getting. I claimed six, but was chidingly informed that my average over the past 30 days was just a little over five hours, and I would need to increase this number to fully enjoy the benefits of my prescribed treatment. This was how I learned that my CPAP was actively collecting data on my sleeping habits, uploading it to an SD card, and showing up my unreliable witnessing as a patient.

While one could discuss the disciplining effects of being aware of the CPAP’s surveillance, what is of perhaps more interest is the sheer casualness of the episode. At no time during my interaction with the medical staff in the process of picking up the CPAP machine did anyone inform me that the machine would be collecting data on my sleeping hours. In fact, I still don’t know what kind of data the machine collects. Is it just sleeping hours, or also GPS co-ordinates? Is there a microphone to measure my breathing? Does the machine have to be active to collect data, or is the data collection continuous? Is this data actionable in a court of law? For example, in case of a motor or similar accident, could an insurance company sue to gain access to the data and use it in an attempt to establish guilt through sleepiness? When does the data on the CPAP machine become a “medical record”, once the machine gathers it, or when it is downloaded in the doctor’s office? A lot of these questions are hypothetical, but they do illustrate possible problems raised by this kind of data collection. However, as interesting as these questions are, the fact that this kind of surveillance was seen as unproblematic even in a field as sensitive to informed consent as medicine, is cause for reflection. As the patient, who had to take this device into my home, I was never asked for my consent, neither was I informed of the data recording capabilities of the CPAP machine.

It isn’t just CPAP machines that collect data without letting people around them know that they are doing so. As reported in the Boston Globe, the black box in Lt. Gov. Tim Murray’s state issued 2007 Ford Crown Victoria collected data that revealed he was traveling at 100mph just before his crash, and that his control of the car was consistent with falling asleep while at the wheel. The good governor walked away unscathed, but the surveillance and subsequent testimony of the car’s black box has led to pointed questions about why the governor was only ticketed for speeding. Government issued cars are not the only ones with black boxes, most relatively modern cars have them. They are busy ticking away recording the driver’s activity, yet at no point during the sales pitch does the car salesman mention this fact. It is buried in the fine print of the owner’s manual, and that only at the behest of a 2006 NHTSA order. It seems almost every day, a story breaks that shows how mundane and useful devices are engaged in surveilling their users: mobile phones that collect GPS location data, Facebook’s questionable uses of highly private data, and camera equipped televisions providing a means of directly observing people in their homes. Perhaps it isn’t paranoid to conclude that everyday objects have taken on a Jekyll & Hyde quality, where they are simultaneously useful and treacherous to their users.

Langdon Winner’s notion of technological somnambulism as a willingness to sleepwalk through the process of reconstituting the conditions of human existence is particularly useful in thinking through public reactions to the phenomenon of habitual technological snooping. It is instructive to observe how ordinary and non-contentious this increased surveillance has become. This is exemplified in the notion that the “Facebook generation” merely has a different definition of privacy. Welcome to the new normal where broad based surveillance is merely how we live! Perhaps we all need to switch off the devices that help us sleep, and wake up. I know that at my next doctor’s visit, I am going to request a full accounting of what exactly it is my CPAP machine records.

 

Keywords: technological somnambulism, surveillance society, electronic data records

 

Tolu Odumosu is a Research Fellow in the Science, Technology and Public Policy Program and the STS Program at Harvard

Suggested Further Reading:

  • Winner, Langdon. 1986.  The Whale and the Reactor: A search for limits in an age of high technology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Sandy Studies: Innovation in time of disaster

Lee Vinsel | 4 December 2012 | 2 responses

On October 29th, 2012, when the surge came, drowning Hoboken, New Jersey’s electrical substation and immersing the city in darkness, I turned off my laptop and stumbled into my nearly pitch-black room. Yet, although Hurricane Sandy wrenched me out of the comfort of my futon, it only grounded me more securely as someone working in science and technology studies (STS). Indeed, I soon began to record my experiences at the team history blog, American Science, which I joined last spring.

Over the coming days, we residents had to make do without access to the information and communications technologies that we unquestioningly rely upon. We had to learn anew—or so it felt—how to see and know. Word-of-mouth news became central to our lives, as did the hand-scrawled whiteboard at city hall, which gave us frequent updates about recovery and relief efforts.

In Hoboken, charging stations began appearing the first night after the storm, particularly up and down 11th Street, which never lost power. Someone ran an extension cord from his or her building to a power strip on the sidewalk below. People then came to charge their cellphones and other devices, using their reawakened tools to assure their loved ones that everything was OK. A day later, I counted nearly fifty charging stations around town.

Similar set-ups emerged all over Manhattan and in public places like libraries in suburban New Jersey. The old STS theme of emulation and invention held true (1). The mass media emphasized the role of charity and solidarity during disaster, and it is absolutely true that communal virtues came shining through in this time of need. Yet, these accounts missed the technologically inventive paths that people took to fulfill such virtues in our—temporarily malfunctioning—technologically-advanced society.

In the United States, few technological systems do more to enable liberalism in the classical sense that the electricity grid. While power systems provide the streetlights that strongly shape our cities at night, they also deliver electricity directly to our private residences. We buy and use our own computers, our own kitchen appliances, our own television sets. This system allows us to create our own private worlds. Yet, the storm wiped away this form of luxury for many people—temporarily making us dependent on communal resources and social intelligence.

For many years, STS scholars have studied “sociotechnical systems,” networks mixing human actors and technologies. Thomas Hughes examined them in his history of electrical power, and John Law drew attention to the need to simultaneously manage machines, people, and natural phenomena with his notion of “heterogeneous engineering” (2). Yet, Hughes and Law described such systems under ideal conditions. The question remains, how do people relate to systems under stress? Wiebe Bijker recently investigated how scientists in India develop systems for nanotechnology research that are much cheaper than systems in rich Western nations. This form of tinkering and making do with limited resources is known in India as jugaad (the idea is akin to the French notion of “bricolage”). During disasters, nearly everyone must practice a bit of jugaad because the systems we depend upon are temporarily not functional. It is important to remember that this is how many people live all the time. A friend from Nigeria reminded me, “In Lagos, we constantly live under Sandy conditions.” Yet, even in Western industrialized nations, technologies must be altered in times of need, and our systems must be “hacked” for life to carry on. Seen in this way, the charging stations were not simply acts of charity but alterations in the norms underpinning our technological systems and ways of life.

We are grateful that we have federal programs, like the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), in place to assist victims during disasters. It is important for STS scholars to understand how these authorities function and how they can improve. But it is equally essential that we come to know how ordinary people cope with disasters on the ground, including by improvising modest technological solutions. We have to see how people work on the fly, through the lens of what we may call “Sandy Studies.” In the coming months and years, STS scholars will have opportunities to go deeper than the popular narratives about Sandy that surround us. It will mean examining and calling into question proposals for infrastructural change and technological overhauls. Sandy partially uncovered many problems in the built world around us. It is now time for us to examine the social joints that held these exposed pieces together, and to strengthen these along with technology’s material components.

References:

  1. Hindle, Brooke. 1981. Emulation and Invention. New York: New York University Press.
  2. Hughes, Thomas. 1983. Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880–1930. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; Law, John. 1987. “Technology and Heterogeneous Engineering: The Case of Portuguese Expansion,” The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in the Sociology and History of Technology. Cambridge: MIT Press. 105–128.

Keywords: networks, heterogeneous engineering, disaster studies

Suggested Further Reading:

  • Erikson, Kai T. 1976. Everything In Its Path. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  • Wynne, Brian. 1988. “Unruly Technology.” Social Studies of Science 18(1):147-167.
  • Jasanoff, Sheila, ed. 1994. Learning from Disaster. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

 

Reconsidering control and freedom on the internet

Alex Wellerstein | 9 February 2012 | Respond

Does anybody still believe cyberspace is a land without controls, without borders, without laws? The Internet-is-freedom hype from the mid-1990s seems to have finally died out even amongst popular commentators, to say nothing about more sophisticated analysts who have been saying this for some time now.

There are two now-obvious reasons that the border-less Internet was a mythical beast. The first is that the infrastructure of the Internet is rooted firmly within national borders. The Internet is nothing if not its infrastructure, the wired and wireless connections between individual computers that make up its communication network. While the popular idea of this is as a completely decentralized, unruly mess, in reality most of the main passageways are controlled by a handful of major corporations, and these corporations are, unsurprisingly, not only influenced by national laws, but are also the creators of laws that serve their corporate interests (e.g. the “net neutrality” issue, where the central contention is whether broadband carriers can set up different bandwidth pricing schemes based on the sites being visited).

The second is that the powers-that-be — the governments and corporations which have the most stakes in regulating certain types of communication — are considerably more powerful than the powers-that-would-be-free. This is not a conspiratorial statement; rather, it is a simple observation that the resources that can be spent on controlling information vastly outnumber the resources available by those who would like it to be free.

The result has been a progressive clamping down on communication freedoms that shows no sign of abating. (more…)

7 billion people: crisis as opportunity

Saul Halfon | 6 December 2011 | Respond

On October 31, 2011, the world’s population reached 7 billion people, according to projections produced by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). This number is reached 13 years after the 6 billion mark, and 13 years before the 8 billion mark is projected to be reached. While this number is the outcome of a massive system of data collection and complex calculations, and is somewhat contested (see this NY Times story, for example), its production is not the focus of public discourse. Instead, not surprisingly, the flurry of media coverage and institutional pronouncements that surround this “momentous” event focus on the fact of 7 billion itself. Apart from its practices of construction, what does such a number mean for an STS audience? How can we read 7 billion?

(more…)

Whose Paternalism Counts?

Margaret Curnutte | 9 September 2011 | Respond

A baby's genetic code is a site of bioconstitutionalism

Within the first few days of life, most newborns in the United States are screened for about forty diseases. Health care providers prick the heels of newborns and collect blood spots on cards for genetic and protein analyses. Newborn screening programs, which began in the 1960s, have allowed researchers to identify, for example, metabolic conditions that clinicians can be treat and cure with early detection. The newborn blood samples, however, can later be anonymized and used for research purposes. In effect, state based screening programs provide a platform for state run biobanks.

In a recent Nature article, “A spot of trouble,” Mary Carmichael covered the current debate around such screening programs. Opponents have raised concerns as to whether parental consent for research on infant blood spots is handled properly. How informed are parents about the state’s ability to biobank their infants’ blood samples? (more…)

What do we mean when we talk about technology "leaking"? A look at laser uranium enrichment

Hugh Gusterson | 2 September 2011 | 2 responses

Photo from Jer Kunz on Flikr.

On August 20, 2011, the New York Times ran a story, “Laser advances in nuclear fuel stir terror fear” about General Electric’s claim to have perfected a new way of enriching uranium, Silex, using lasers.  GE claims that the new technology, which scientists have sought to perfect for decades, would make the traditionally arduous, dirty, and dangerous process of uranium enrichment cheaper and more efficient.  They are seeking federal approval for a new $1 billion uranium separation plant just outside Wilmington, North Carolina.
The story poses challenges to a science journalist: the new technology is so secret that no pictures or diagrams of it are publicly available, its designers are loath to talk about it, and the technical accomplishments involved in its development are out-of-bounds for public discussion. (more…)

BART protests over cell phone disruption

Samuel Evans | 26 August 2011 | Respond

BART Protestors. Photo by Cold Storage on Flikr

As I was sitting on the San Francisco Bay Area’s subway line (BART) yesterday, an announcement came on to state that the Civic Center station, in the heart of downtown San Francisco, was closed and would remain so until further notice.  My suspicions on what caused the closure were confirmed when I pulled out my smartphone to check the news: there were more people mobbing the station to protest about BART’s decision on August 11th to shut off cell phone service during earlier protests, which themselves were done to protest the shooting of Charles Hill on July 3rd by a police officer.

That I was able to check this on my phone also gave me confirmation that BART had not cut off cell phone coverage again.  The disruption of cell phone service for the August 11th protests was the first in US history, and in the discussion that has ensued, the BART Board of Directors recognized that they had touched on freedom of speech issues.  There was talk of having a “right to cell phone service.” (more…)

Early Gender Tests

Samuel Evans | 20 August 2011 | Respond

An early sex test available now

Early gender pregnancy tests have hit the market in the United States. Available direct-to-consumer at online pharmacies and maternity stores, medical genetic tests developed to select for sex in pregnancies with a strong risk of sex-linked hereditary disease are now being marketed as a way to decide whether to buy in pink or in blue as early as the 7th week of pregnancy. Moreover, a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that fetal DNA tests, which detect y-chromosomes in a pregnant woman’’s blood, are 95% accurate.  This offers a reliable method of sex-determination months earlier than standard ultrasound exams, which typically occur at 18-22 weeks.

Some articles recently in the news have commented on how these tests might be used for family balancing or for discriminatory abortions.  Other articles draw out how the tests are only available in the United States through direct-to-consumer options.  This is an area ripe for ethical discussion, but that is not the only point of entry for an STS analysis, as the following scholars point out: (more…)

E coli outbreak and the role of evidence in policy

Elta Smith | 1 July 2011 | Respond

Francisco Sosa Wagner, Spainish MEP, holding a cucumber in the EU Parliament (via European Parliament on flickr)

In late May, 2011, an outbreak of infections related to a rare strain of E coli dominated the news headlines.  The source remains uncertain, but the finger pointing that followed the outbreak—Spanish cucumbers, an organic bean sprout farm in Germany—has created billions of dollars in damage to fresh produce farmers across Europe and political damage within the EU and beyond.

This episode raises a fundamental question about what constitutes acceptable scientific evidence in policy making. At each stage in the still unfolding food crisis, a definitive link between symptoms and the identified source has not been established. We now know that cucumbers were not the cause of the outbreak in Germany. Bean sprouts served in a German restaurant have tested positive for the E coli strain, but none of the same strain was found at the suspected farm. Public health officials across the EU have been quick to shift the blame away from their own borders, but tracking down the ultimate source of the outbreak could take months or years, and may never happen. (more…)