Surveillance Culture and Fundamental Rights: The Excluded and the Beneficiaries
Keywords:
Surveillance culture, privacy, fundamental rights, information ethicsAbstract
Surveillance has progressively grown in social life in the 20th and 21st centuries. It happened partly because of the adoption of multiple sensors that can extract, collect and analyze an enormous volume of data. This expressive data volume, variety, and processing velocity are known as big data. The increasing adoption of big data and models based on algorithmic intelligence has a massive impact on society because of its dissemination among social spheres through relations between the public and private sectors. This paper aims to discuss surveillance culture and its consequences on fundamental rights such as privacy and freedom of speech. In addition, it is intended to debate the excluded and the beneficiaries of a surveillance society. The methodological approach is the literature review. The conclusion relies on the need for intercultural ethics to strengthen the right to privacy to guarantee not only itself but multiple fundamental rights nowadays.