Securing the data economy: translating privacy and enacting security in the development of DataSHIELD
Author(s)
Murtagh, M. J.Demir, I.
Jenkings, K. N.
Wallace, S. E.
Murtagh, B.
Boniol, Mathieu
Bota, Maria
LaFlamme, P.
Boffetta, P.
Ferretti, V.
Burton, P. R.
Contributor(s)
International Prevention Research Institute (IPRI)The Tisch Cancer Institute ; Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Keywords
*Biomedical Research Computer Security/ethics/*legislation & jurisprudence/*standards Confidentiality/ethics/legislation & jurisprudence/*standards Ethics Committees Humans Information Storage and Retrieval/*methods Research *Research Design[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie
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https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01262906Abstract
Murtagh, M J Demir, I Jenkings, K N Wallace, S E Murtagh, B Boniol, M Bota, M Laflamme, P Boffetta, P Ferretti, V Burton, P R eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Switzerland 2012/06/23 06:00 Public Health Genomics. 2012;15(5):243-53. doi: 10.1159/000336673. Epub 2012 Jun 20.International audience
Contemporary bioscience is seeing the emergence of a new data economy: with data as its fundamental unit of exchange. While sharing data within this new 'economy' provides many potential advantages, the sharing of individual data raises important social and ethical concerns. We examine ongoing development of one technology, DataSHIELD, which appears to elide privacy concerns about sharing data by enabling shared analysis while not actually sharing any individual-level data. We combine presentation of the development of DataSHIELD with presentation of an ethnographic study of a workshop to test the technology. DataSHIELD produced an application of the norm of privacy that was practical, flexible and operationalizable in researchers' everyday activities, and one which fulfilled the requirements of ethics committees. We demonstrated that an analysis run via DataSHIELD could precisely replicate results produced by a standard analysis where all data are physically pooled and analyzed together. In developing DataSHIELD, the ethical concept of privacy was transformed into an issue of security. Development of DataSHIELD was based on social practices as well as scientific and ethical motivations. Therefore, the 'success' of DataSHIELD would, likewise, be dependent on more than just the mathematics and the security of the technology.
Date
2012Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:HAL:hal-01262906v1hal-01262906
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01262906
DOI : 10.1159/000336673
DOI
: 10.1159/000336673ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
: 10.1159/000336673