Security & Privacy
Measuring Emotions in the Digital Age
Facial recognition tech can identify and analyze key emotional states — but must be used with care.
Facial recognition tech can identify and analyze key emotional states — but must be used with care.
Some want big tech companies broken up. Others call for stiffer industry oversight. Who’s right?
As sports become ever more analytical, can there be such a thing as too much data?
A value chain lens reveals a growing cybercrime ecosystem and new strategies for combating it.
Consumers’ concerns about data privacy are offset by a desire for personalized service.
Smart machines can help pick crops and reduce traffic — but what’s their impact on privacy?
Technology has made our lives incomparably better but also constitutes one of our biggest threats.
Organizations can benefit from four activities in their journey toward better digital trust.
Join MIT SMR Connections and SAS for a Twitter chat on how to make sure your data is trustworthy.
New research by MIT SMR Connections and SAS reveals how organizations build trust in analytics.
Makers of AI applications should stop overpromising, be transparent, and consider certification.
The MIT SMR Strategy Forum examines whether privacy concerns limit the use of consumer data.
Apps that encourage users to share contact information expose companies to a huge security liability.
Data audits may be helpful in maintaining balance between data-rich and data-poor companies.
Emotion-sensing technologies can lead to better decisions and alleviate stress — if privacy issues are addressed.
Internet-enabled mobile devices have fundamentally changed marketing — and personal privacy.
What’s happening this week at the intersection of management and technology: how to avoid digital black swans; partnering with early-stage startups; the trouble with wearables.
New research shows that mobile advertising targeted to consumers based on their locations can be effective.
Will consumers start to resist data-sharing, or is it inevitable that we’re moving into a new era of diminished privacy?