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Research, the Cloud, and the IRB:

Research, the Cloud, and the IRB:. New Opportunities :: new challenges. Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Director, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee zimmerm@uwm.edu www.michaelzimmer.org.

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Research, the Cloud, and the IRB:

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  1. Research, the Cloud, and the IRB: New Opportunities :: new challenges Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Director, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee zimmerm@uwm.edu www.michaelzimmer.org

  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 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? Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  4. What is Cloud Computing? KEXINO (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) http://www.flickr.com/photos/kexino/4202662815/ 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 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 programslocated on the web • By 2011, 80% of Fortune 500 companies use IBM cloud Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  7. 3 Layers of Cloud Computing http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_computing.svg (CC BY-SA 3.0) Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  8. Application Layer • “Software as a service” • Providing productivity applications via the Web; no local software needed 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 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 Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  17. Fold.It http://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 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 Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  20. Amazon Mechanical Turk Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  21. 3 Layers of Cloud Computing http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cloud_computing.svg (CC BY-SA 3.0) Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  22. Ethical Dimensions • Subject confidentiality & anonymity • Data privacy & security • Data ownership & stewardship • Research integrity& authorship 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? 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) 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? 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? 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?” 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? 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 researchers Nissenbaum, H. 2011. “Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life” 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 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 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? 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 intermediaries Carpenter, K & Dittrich, D. “Bridging the Distance: Removing the Technology Buffer and Seeking Consistent Ethical Analysis in Computer Security Research” 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… 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 guidancefrom HHS and related regulatory bodies 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… 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 Virginia IRB Consortium Conference

  38. Research, the Cloud, and the IRB: New Opportunities :: new challenges Michael Zimmer, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies Director, Center for Information Policy Research University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee zimmerm@uwm.edu www.michaelzimmer.org

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