From dataveillance to Überveillance and the realpolitik of the transparent society : 29 October 2007, Wollongong, Australia / editors Katina Michael and M.G. Michael
Published
Wollongong, N.S.W. : IP Location-Based Services Research Program (Faculty of Informatics) jointly with the Centre for Transnational Crime Prevention (Faculty of Law), University of Wollongong, 2007
1. Opening remarks / Doug MacKinnon -- 2. A note on überveillance / M.G. Michael and K. Michael -- 3. Keynote address: What 'überveillance' is and what to so about it / Roger Clarke -- 4. Keynote appendix: Surveillance vignettes / Roger Clarke -- 5. Owning identity - one or many - do we have a choice? / Marcus Wigan -- 6. Opposing surveillance / Brian Martin -- 7. Message in a bottle: Stored communications interception as practised in Australia / Rob Nicholls and Michelle Rowland -- 8. Australian and the 'war against terrorism': Terrorism, national security and human rights / Mark Rix -- 9. Panel session: The case for detention without charge in suspected terrorism cases in Australia / Nicholas O'Brien -- 10. The benefits and concerns of public data availability in Australia: a survey of security experts / Roba Abbas -- 11. Re-using public sector information (PSI) for profit: Who's data is it anyway? / Mark Burdon -- 12. The Internet as a communication medium and a social space: a social constructivist approach to the use of open data / Lucy Resnyansky -- 13. The Agora-Pnyx paradox / George Mickhail -- 14. Something smart going on: the apocalyptic aesthetics of surveillance / Marcus O'Donnell -- 15. Auto-ID and location-based services in national security: social implications / Holly Tootell -- 16. Privacy implications of automated GPS tracking and profiling / Muhammad Usman Iqbal and Samsung Lim -- 17. Human tracking technology in mutual legal assistance and police inter-state cooperation in international crimes / Katina Michael and Gregory Rose -- 18. ePassport security under the microscope / Matthew Sirotich -- 19. Improving information security management: an Australian universities case study / Tim Lane and Lauren May
Notes
At head of title: RNSA Research Network Secure Australia