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Customer Reviews:Average Customer Rating: Informative but not pleasureable reading Very informative, extensively researched, well cited... not fun to read. I would describe it as text book reading. Solove spends pages and pages citing examples of each topic. If you're interested in databases and the privacy implications of data collection this book will tell you everything you want to know and more... but if you want a pleasurable read I would NOT suggest this book. good, but a bit paranoid and with funky language This book brings up some great points about privacy in an increasingly digital age, but solove latches onto the term "dossier" which is accurate but rubbed me the wrong way. Maybe because it suggests that companies are compiling information on inviduals for reasons duplicitous, when really the motivation is to make money ... often less emotional. The Digital Person I think this book address the rising problem of privacy in the Information Age very well. Discussing the history of databases and the privacy laws are helpful, but I think the author goes too much into that. I was hoping the book would discuss more about how privacy problems could be in the future and how to deal with them effectively. taken from Journal of Law, Economics & Policy Volume 1, Number 2 (Winter 2005) "The knowledge which can be gained from the study of this text is found in the placement that Solove's topic has within the broader debate surrounding the role of knowledge in society. Solove's points chime in right around the time we recognize that computers have great potential for advancing the spread and use of productive information. Computers provide tools capable of tapping into dispersed knowledge; but, we must simultaneously recognize that they are not miracle cures to be implemented from central positions of authority. The knowledge which they coordinate is valuable only in so far that it is dispersed and subjective. The hazardous notions of knowledge, in the Hayekian sense, would be those which claim to be more complete and universally applicable than they actually are. When based upon such false notions, actions stand to be erroneous, misinformed, and the host to unintended consequences." Distortion of John E. Holts Public Record The information in this book about John E. Holt, former GSA Official is false | | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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