Research, the Cloud, and the IRB: NEW OPPORTUNITIES :: NEW CHALLENGES Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant...
-
Upload
frederica-jenkins -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
0
Transcript of Research, the Cloud, and the IRB: NEW OPPORTUNITIES :: NEW CHALLENGES Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant...
Research, the Cloud, and the IRB:NEW OPPORTUNITIES :: NEW CHALLENGES
Michael Zimmer, PhDAssistant Professor, School of Information StudiesDirector, Center for Information Policy ResearchUniversity of [email protected]
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 2
• Anyone who has studied the history of technology knows that technological change is always a Faustian bargain
• Technology giveth and technology taketh away, and not always in equal measure.
• A new technology sometimes creates more than it destroys. Sometimes, it destroys more than it creates. But it is never one-sided.
• Neil Postman
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 3
Agenda• What is Cloud Computing?
• Opportunities for Use in Research
• Ethical Dimensions• Subject confidentiality & anonymity• Data privacy & security• Data ownership & stewardship• Research integrity & authorship
• Conceptual Gaps & Policy Vacuums
• What can Researchers and IRBs do?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 4
What is Cloud Computing?
KEXINO (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) http://www.flickr.com/photos/kexino/4202662815/
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 5
What is Cloud Computing?• On-demand, network-based access to computing
recourses
• Features• Location independent; supports increased mobility• Flexible, scalable, robust• On-demand performance; big data processing• Little (if any) local support or maintenance
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 6
What is Cloud Computing?• Milestones
• 1999 – Salesforce.com delivers enterprise services via the web• 2002 – Amazon Web Services (storage, computation, human
intelligence via the cloud)• 2004 – Gmail reboots web-based email, follows with Google
Docs• 2006 – Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2)• 2007 – IBM shifts focus to the cloud
• Popularity• As early as 2008, 69 percent of Americans were using webmail
services, storing data online, or otherwise using software programs located on the web
• By 2011, 80% of Fortune 500 companies use IBM cloud
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 7
3 Layers of Cloud Computing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_computing.svg (CC BY-SA 3.0)
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 8
Application Layer• “Software as a service”
• Providing productivity applications via the Web; no local software needed
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 9
Platform Layer• “Platform as a service”
• Providing application development platforms and operating systems via the Web
• Can deploy applications without needing your own infrastructure or distribution channels
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 10
Infrastructure Layer• “Infrastructure as a service”
• Provide computing infrastructure on demand
• Outsourcing servers, storage, network equipment, processing power, data centers
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 11
Research Opportunities for Cloud Computing• Application layer
• Most common and easiest application of cloud• Data gathering, storage, collaboration
• Platform layer• Hosted apps for recruitment & surveys
• Infrastructure layer• Access to increased processing power for large-scale
research projects• Some non-traditional uses
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 12
Research Opportunities: Applications• Data gathering using web-based survey
applications• SurveyMonkey• Zoomerang• Qualtrics
• Typically used “in the wild”, sometimes institutionally-bound
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 13
Research Opportunities: Applications• Data storage & sharing using cloud-based
applications• Dropbox• Box.net• iCloud
• Communication & collaboration using cloud-based applications• Gmail, IM, Skype• Google Docs, Office Live• Wikis
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 14
Research Opportunities: Platforms• With skilled programmers, can build custom apps
to deploy via cloud-based platforms• Subject recruitment and screening apps on Facebook• Building and deploying test instruments within online
gaming platforms• Monitoring and activity tracking apps on mobile device
platforms
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 15
Research Opportunities: Infrastructure• Leverage cloud-based computing infrastructures to
handle resource-intensive processing tasks• Clinical trial data storage & processing• Sharing extremely large databases
• Innovative, non-traditional use of cloud-based processing “resources”• ____@Home (distributed computing)• Fold.It• Amazon Mechanical Turk
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 16
Fold.It• Web-based puzzle video game to assist with
protein folding research
• Leverage millions of gamers to assist in data processing
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 17
Fold.It
10/12/2012http://fold.it/
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 18
Fold.It• Web-based puzzle video game to assist with
protein folding research
• Leverage millions of gamers to assist in data processing
• Players produced an accurate 3D model of and AIDS-related enzyme in just 10 days• Researchers had been trying for 15 years
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 19
Amazon Mechanical Turk• Facilitates outsourcing of computational or other
mundane tasks
• Requesters post “Human Intelligence Tasks” offering minimal fees
• Workers select tasks to complete for micropayments
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 20
Amazon Mechanical Turk
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 21
3 Layers of Cloud Computing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_computing.svg (CC BY-SA 3.0)
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 22
Ethical Dimensions• Subject confidentiality & anonymity
• Data privacy & security
• Data ownership & stewardship
• Research integrity & authorship
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 23
Subject Confidentiality & Anonymity• When recruiting subjects or collecting data with
cloud-based applications…• Are IP addresses logged in such a way to allow re-
identification of subjects• Using a Facebook app might provide researchers access
to unnecessary personal information• Are cloud providers tracking data and usage
themselves? Delivering ads? Selling user data?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 24
Data Privacy & Security• Critical concern of any cloud system, takes on even
more importance when dealing with subject data• Are cloud-based communication and collaboration systems
using SSL encryption?• Is data stored on cloud-servers encrypted? • What is service’s policy regarding 3rd party access
• Advertisers• Investigative inquiry vs. subpoena vs. warrants?• Electronic Communication Privacy Act (ECPA)
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 25
Data Ownership & Stewardship• Who owns, and who controls (meta)data in the
cloud?• Are you granting the cloud provider any license to use your
data or activities (for advertising, data mining, etc)?• Can you ensure data remains in the U.S.?• Can data be destroyed on demand, including backups?• Can you ensure cloud provider won’t hold your data
“hostage”, or disappear?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 26
Research Integrity & Authorship• Should researchers rely on cloud-based data
processing and analysis?• Can you trust (or audit?) external/collaborative processing
platforms• Ethical to use Mechanical Turk, or otherwise outsource
mundane tasks to unknown persons for nominal wages?• Authorship claims?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 27
Conceptual Gaps & Policy Vacuums• Emergence of new technologies often lead to
conceptual gaps in how we think about ethical problems, and reveal policy vacuums for how we should best address them
• Computer technology transforms “many of our human activities and social institutions,” and will “leave us with policy and conceptual vacuums about how to use computer technology”
• “Often, either no policies for conduct in these situations exist or existing policies seem inadequate.
• Jim Moor, “What is Computer Ethics?”
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 28
Conceptual Gaps & Policy Vacuums• The fluidity and complexity of cloud-based tools
and platforms creates potential conceptual gaps• Are these ethical dimensions merely the same as before,
or fundamentally different due to the cloud?• Does the nature of anonymity, privacy, consent, even
harm change when dealing with cloud-based research?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 29
Conceptual Gap: Privacy• Presumption that because subjects make information
available on a cloud-based service, they don’t have an expectation of privacy• Researchers/IRBs might assume everything is always public,
and was meant to be• Assumes no harm could come to subjects if data is already
“public”
• New ethical problems…• Ignores contextual nature of sharing• Fails to recognize the strict dichotomy of public/private
doesn’t apply in the 2.0 world• Need to track if ToS/architecture have changed, or if users
even understand what is available to researchersNissenbaum, H. 2011. “Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life”
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 30
Conceptual Gap: Anonymity vs. Identifiability• Presumption that stripping names & other obvious
identifiers provides sufficient anonymity when sharing data in the cloud• Assumes only PII allows re-identification
• New ethical problems…• Ignores how anything can potentially identifiable
information and become the “missing link” to re-identify an entire dataset
• “Anonymous” datasets are not achievable and provides false sense of protection
Ohm, P. “Broken promises of privacy: Responding to the surprising failure of anonymization.” UCLA Law Review
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 31
Conceptual Gap: Consent• Presumption that because something is shared or
available without a password, the subject is consenting to it being harvested for research• Assumes no harm can come from use of data already
shared with friends or other contextually-bound circles
• New ethical problems…• Must recognize that a user making something public
online comes with a set of assumptions/expectations about who can access and how
• Must recognize how research methods might allow un-anticipated access to “restricted” data
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 32
Conceptual Gap: Harm• Presumption that “harm” means risk of physical or
tangible impact on subject• Researchers often imply “data is already public, so what
harm could possibly happen”
• New ethical problems• Must move beyond the concept of harm as requiring a
tangible consequence• Protecting from harm is more than protecting from hackers,
spammers, identity thieves, etc• Consider dignity/autonomy theories of harm
• Must a “wrong” occur for there to be damage to the subject?• Do subjects deserve control over the use of their data streams?
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 33
Conceptual Gap: Human Subjects• Researchers (esp. CompSci) often interact only
with datasets, objects, or avatars, thus feel a conceptual distance from an actual human• Often don’t consider what they do as “human subject”
research
• New ethical problems• Must bridge this (artificial) distance between
researcher and the actual human subject• Also consider other stakeholders within the complex
arrangement of information intermediariesCarpenter, K & Dittrich, D. “Bridging the Distance: Removing the Technology Buffer and Seeking Consistent Ethical Analysis in Computer Security Research”
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 34
Conceptual Gaps & Policy Vacuums• The fluidity and complexity of cloud-based tools and
platforms creates potential conceptual gaps• Are these ethical dimensions merely the same as before, or
fundamentally different due to the cloud?• Does the nature of anonymity, privacy, consent, even harm
change when dealing with cloud-based research?
• Leaving researchers & IRBs with considerable policy vacuums• How should researchers deal with using the cloud in their
projects?• How should IRBs review them?
• And how can we ensure good research still gets done…
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 35
What can Researchers & IRBs do? - broadly
• Get educated, find recourses• Events like today; PRIM&R• Utilize disciplinary resources
• For example: “Ethical decision-making and Internet research: Recommendations from the AoIR Ethics Working Committee”
• Keep up on research• Utilize experts
• Look for guidance• Increased attention hopefully will prompt guidance
from HHS and related regulatory bodies
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 36
What can Researchers & IRBs do? - practically
• Read and understand the Terms of Service• Incorporate in risk analysis
• Include mention of cloud-based services in consent forms• Level of detail?
• Monitor/audit cloud services over life of project• Have terms or practices changed?
• All this is new, complex, and difficult…
10/12/2012
Virginia IRB Consortium Conference 37
• Anyone who has studied the history of technology knows that technological change is always a Faustian bargain
• Technology giveth and technology taketh away, and not always in equal measure.
• A new technology sometimes creates more than it destroys. Sometimes, it destroys more than it creates. But it is never one-sided.
• Neil Postman
10/12/2012
Research, the Cloud, and the IRB:NEW OPPORTUNITIES :: NEW CHALLENGES
Michael Zimmer, PhDAssistant Professor, School of Information StudiesDirector, Center for Information Policy ResearchUniversity of [email protected]