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Applications for the Internet of Things are becoming increasingly popular. Due to the large amount of available context data, such applications can be used effectively in many domains. By interlinking these data and analyzing them, it is possible to gather a lot of knowledge about a user. Therefore, these applications pose a threat to privacy. In this paper, we illustrate this threat by looking at a real-world application scenario. Current state of the art focuses on privacy mechanisms either for Smart Things or for big data processing systems. However, our studies show that for a comprehensive privacy protection a holistic view on these applications is required. Therefore, we describe how to combine two promising privacy approaches from both categories, namely AVARE and PATRON. Evaluation results confirm the thereby achieved synergy effects.
Digital Transformation, Smart Factories, and Virtual Design: Contributions of Subject Orientation
(2018)
Umsetzung eines Pay-as-you-Live Systems : Konzeptioneller Ansatz für ein eigenständiges PAYL-System
(2021)
Software engineering, as a central practice of digitalization, needs to become accountable for sustainability. In light of the ecological crises and the tremendous impact of digital systems on reshaping economic and social arrangements - often with negative side-effects - we need a sustainability transformation of the digital transformation. However, this is a complex and long-term task. In this article we combine an analysis of accountability arrangements in software engineering and a model of sustainability transformations to trace how certain dynamics are starting to make software engineering accountable for sustainability in the technological, cultural, economic and governance domains. The article discusses existing approaches for sustainable software engineering and software engineering for sustainability, traces emerging discourses that connect digitalization and sustainability, highlights new digital business models that may support sustainability and shows governance efforts to highlight “green and digital” policy problems. Yet, we argue that these are so far niche dynamics and that a sustainability transformation requires a collective and long-lasting effort to engender systemic changes. The goal should be to create varied accountability arrangements for sustainability in software engineering which is embedded in complex ways in society and economy.
In dem vorliegenden Beitrag wird der aktuelle Trend, Payas-you-live-Systeme (PAYL) in Verbindung mit Krankenversicherungen anzubieten, analysiert. PAYL-Systeme bedeutet konkret die kontinuierliche Erfassung von Gesundheitsdaten mithilfe technischer Geräte und Übermittlung dieser Daten an Versicherungen sowie die Auszahlung von Boni für erreichte Fitnessziele. Zunächst wird eine Definition von PAYL-Systemen dargelegt, dann werden die technischen Rahmenbedingungen erläutert, schließlich werden die Auswirkungen dieser soziotechnischen Systeme näher beleuchtet. Dies geschieht auf Grundlage unserer empirischen Untersuchung. Die drei identifizierten Hauptkonflikte betreffen die Genese von PAYL, seine Auswirkungen auf den Wert der Datensouveränität besonders für Versicherte und die Schwierigkeit, für den Anspruch auf Prävention und Kostenersparnis durch PAYL Evidenz zu erzeugen. Diese Konflikte werden diskutiert, um sowohl die direkten wie auch indirekten Auswirkungen der Digitalisierung und der Ökonomisierung des Sozialen durch PAYL zu beleuchten.