DocumentCode :
2512855
Title :
Research Data in Google Earth: How Do We Protect Privacy and Meet Ethical Obligations?
Author :
Fleet, Gregory J. ; Williamson, Micah
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Bus., Univ. of New Brunswick, St. John, NB, Canada
fYear :
2009
fDate :
25-27 Aug. 2009
Firstpage :
214
Lastpage :
217
Abstract :
In 2005, Google released Google Earth (a free virtual globe, map and geographic information program) allowing anyone with location coordinates (postal codes, GPS data) to create and share accurate spatial-location maps. It has since become a powerful tool for researchers and scientists in the growing discipline of visual data analysis. In 2008, Fleet and Williamson demonstrated analytic and communication benefits by mapping the survey data of 400 small and medium businesses in Atlantic Canada. Yet, our (research) ethical obligation is to ensure the confidentiality of identification information received from respondents, and the postal code data entered into geo-analytic tools such as Google Earth allow the viewer to see identification pins marking individual buildings or rooftops. This paper will summarize the Canadian requirements on privacy, confidentiality and identification issues and requirements for Canadian researchers (as defined by the Canadian Tri-Council Policy Statement). It will conclude with a series of proposals and discussion points (both technical and non-technical) for how to address these concerns.
Keywords :
cartography; data privacy; geographic information systems; Canadian Tri-Council Policy Statement; Google Earth; ethical obligation; geo-analytic tool; geographic information program; privacy protection; spatial-location map; virtual globe; Data analysis; Data privacy; Data security; Earth; Ethics; Global Positioning System; Niobium; Pins; Proposals; Protection; Canada; TCPS; ethics; geolocation; privacy;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Privacy, Security, Trust and the Management of e-Business, 2009. CONGRESS '09. World Congress on
Conference_Location :
Saint John, NB
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5344-3
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3805-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CONGRESS.2009.29
Filename :
5341696
Link To Document :
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