Abstract
Our lives are facilitated and mediated by software. Thanks to software, data on nearly everything can be generated, accessed and analysed for all sorts of reasons. Software technologies, combined with political and commercial ideas and practices, have led to a wide range of our activities being monitored, which is the source of concerns about surveillance and privacy. We pose the questions: What is monitoring? Do diverse and disparate monitoring systems have anything in common? What role does monitoring play in contested issues of surveillance and privacy? We are developing an abstract theory for studying monitoring that begins by capturing structures common to many different monitoring practices. The theory formalises the idea that monitoring is a process that observes the behaviour of people and objects in a context. Such entities and their behaviours can be represented by abstract data types and their observable attributes by logics. In this paper, we give a formal model of monitoring based on the idea that behaviour is modelled by streams of data, and apply the model to a social context: the monitoring of web usage by staff and members of an organisation.
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Acknowledgments
These ideas were first presented publicly by one of us (JVT) at Gregynog in an invited lecture at WADT16; we thank the organisers for the invitation and colleagues attending WADT 16 for their encouraging and helpful comments. This work was partially supported by the EPSRC project Data Release - Trust, Identity, Privacy and Security (EP/N028139/1 and EP/N027825/1).
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Johnson, K., Tucker, J.V., Wang, V. (2017). Theorising Monitoring: Algebraic Models of Web Monitoring in Organisations. In: James, P., Roggenbach, M. (eds) Recent Trends in Algebraic Development Techniques. WADT 2016. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 10644. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72044-9_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72044-9_3
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