https://tidsskrift.dk/privacy_studies_journal/issue/feed Privacy Studies Journal 2024-05-20T18:58:59+02:00 Mette Birkedal Bruun mbb@teol.ku.dk Open Journal Systems <p>Privacy Studies Journal (PSJ) is a fully open access, multidisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal published by the <a href="https://teol.ku.dk/privacy">Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Privacy Studies</a>, University of Copenhagen. It has an international <a href="https://tidsskrift.dk/privacy_studies_journal/about/editorialTeam">editorial board</a> with members representing a broad range of academic fields.</p> <p>PSJ spans the present and the past, and envisions the future. Featuring original, high-quality research on privacy in its broadest sense and with the human component in focus, we welcome contributions that take privacy and the private as catalysts for analysis.</p> https://tidsskrift.dk/privacy_studies_journal/article/view/143099 Artificial Intelligence and Privacy 2024-02-27T11:13:51+01:00 Mateusz Jurewicz mateusz.jurewicz@gmail.com Natacha Klein Kafer nkk@teol.ku.dk Esben Kran esben@kran.ai <p>Modern Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies have a rapidly growing impact on a wide range of human activities. AI methods are being used in varied domains such as healthcare, material science, infrastructure engineering, social media, surveillance technologies, and even artistic expression. They have been used for the purposes of drug discovery via protein folding prediction, power usage optimization through reinforcement learning, and facial recognition by means of image segmentation. Their effectiveness and wide-scale, unregulated deployment within our societies pose significant risks to our fundamental rights. Multiple existing AI methods have the potential to profoundly undermine our ability to safeguard our privacy. The societal impact of such AI models can be investigated through six concentric Heuristic Zones of privacy. These AI models can perform inferences regarding highly sensitive, personal information such as race, gender, and intelligence from seemingly innocuous data sources beyond the capabilities of human experts. They are capable of generating increasingly accurate text and image recreations of our thoughts from non-invasive brain activity recordings such as magnetoencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging. Furthermore, prospective AI technologies pose concerns about the existential risk to our civilization which extend beyond the erosion of privacy and other fundamental human rights.</p> 2024-05-20T00:00:00+02:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Mateusz Jurewicz, Natacha Klein Kafer, Esben Kran