Magna Concursos
3232552 Ano: 2024
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: Consulplan
Orgão: PRODABEL
Provas:

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Do you trust your IoT device?

Do you know the security and privacy risks of your IoT device? If we want everyone to benefit from the potential of Internet- -connected devices, we need to ensure that they are safe and trusted. You can join people around the world and stand up for a safer and more secure connected world. While consumer IoT devices will undoubtedly be fun and may enhance our daily lives, they will also introduce a host of new privacy issues, and amplify existing ones. IoT devices will encroach upon traditionally private spaces such as the home, and extend the data collection practices of the online world into the offline world. The number and nature of sensors being introduced will bring data collection ever closer to our bodies and intimate spaces. The intimacy and ubiquity of IoT will raise issues of control, consent and transparency, and increasingly erode the boundary between the private and the public spheres.

Privacy is a key factor in trust relationships. When we disclose data to others, we are (implicitly or otherwise) trusting them not to use it in ways that conflict with our interests. In the context of IoT, privacy boils down to two things: either we trust third parties not to abuse the data generated by our use of connected objects, or we rely on the ability to control the collection and use of that data. Privacy therefore carries strong implications of trust, transparency and control:

• The ability for individuals to control how the information collected by their IoT devices is shared, and determine who has access to the data from devices in your home, in your car, and on your person. This means easy ways to blind and mute devices, and to have a say in how IoT data is analyzed or shared with third parties.

• Clarity about how information about people is collected, used, and shared with others. IoT devices and their applications should enable the user to find out what information is collected and shared, when and with whom.

• The ability to determine how identifiable one is when undertaking online or offline activities. IoT devices should have the option for pseudonymous or anonymous use.

• The ability to control one’s digital footprint, especially from IoT devices in intimate settings. The user should understand where information about them has gone, and how long it is kept.

(Available in: https://www.internetsociety.org. Adapted.)

 

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Analista de TI

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