Contact

Simply fill in the form below

Contact us :: Photokonnexion

Please Contact Us…

Please… Contact us

We want you to contact us. We welcome feedback, comments, article requests and information.
Our mission on this site is to examine issues on…

Dignity, Freedom, Privacy and Security in a technological society

Comments are welcome on the individual pages of the site. Please also feel free to submit more detailed information and ideas. You might also like to send us an article to publish. Any ideas on our subject are considered. We do not guarantee publication. We may edit your work to fit our house style. But, all submissions are guaranteed equal consideration. We will always welcome your ideas.

Information…

Privacy – We will take all possible measures to preserve your privacy.
Security – this is a secure form.
Cookies – This site uses cookies for smooth working and good service. They do not threaten your privacy.
General questions – please feel free to ask questions about any aspect of our mission.
Requests – If you have a request for an article please give as much detail as possible.

Contact us Form…

Comments or questions are welcome.

* indicates required field

One thought on “Contact

  1. I agree entirely with your views on this issue, and thank you for your work to raise the profile of “Dignity, Freedom, Privacy and Security in a technological society”.

    Just one question: you seem to focus mainly on the issues surrounding techno-surviellance by the state, and related groups. It seems to me that even greater (?) voluntary and involuntary data collection by private companies poses similarly important threats. “Big data” collection and analysis by private companies is used for all manner of ends, from focused advertising to political campaigns. Moreover, there are a growing number of links between government held data and privately held data. I have been told by a hotelier, for example, that when you check into a hotel all the data you give the hotel is routinely given to the local police – to be checked against lists of outstanding arrest warrants, etc. Anyway, my point is simply that private sector data requirements, collation and use, together with sharing of that data with government, greatly exacerbates the concerns rightly held about surveillance by the state.

    Please accept my apologies if you have already covered these issues, but I missed them.

    Best wishes

    Derrick

Leave a Reply to Derrick Wilkinson Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *