Kolek planning to go pro
I suppose, just seems really stupid. In today's day and age, you take a photo of yourself or someone else in that type of situation, bad things seem to follow. Digital destruction. Appreciate the response. My wife and I have had this conversation with our kids many times. You take photos like this, guaranteed someone is saving it for later, or sending it to a buddy, or whatever. It will come back on you, guaranteed. Don't take the photo. Period.
JBI am the COO of a Microsoft-funded enterprise developing platforms for the Azure stack. We are deploying our first Health Care pilot with a major cancer research center, two regional health care facilities and underserved clinics in the PNW. Obviously, patient privacy and security are central to the delivery and we have a significantly improved security protocols based on emergent stream architectures that are parameter-defined. This is an innovative way to provide significantly heightened security around huge amounts of data. I understand what you are saying about ongoing security issues but the Cloud is far more secure than storing on an individual box. And the point of the Cloud isn't storage but, rather, computing power. As we aggregate EMRs we can have 50,000 servers slewed to a query in seconds with the end result being the harmonization of records and the democratization of patient care. Big Data has been a reality for decades but only now is the infrastructure enabling its incredible potential.
Not a morality play at all. I'm curious why people take naked photos of themselves....are they that vane?
I understand the ability to increase security with huge amounts of data, but with that comes an increased motivation to target them. In the end it is all software and software can be beaten with enough motivations.If it is economically viable to target these "large data" clouds, then people will and you can't stop them.
What if people started hacking others' search and browsing history?
At the end of the day, what is important is improving the quality of patient care, especially for underserved populations.
I'm actually fine with it for medical records. Maybe I'm strange, but I wouldn't have any problem with anyone hacking my medical records.
This just may bring back the Polaroid camera....
But, unless you develop the film yourself, you are handing your film over to a minimum wage youngster to do with as they please. If you mean a digital Polaroid, it would be easier just to turn off the icloud or other backup service on the phone.
Have you ever used a Polaroid? There is no film to develop -- the original 'instant' camera
What are you talking about? I am talking about this:As demonstrated by the lovely Candice Bergen in 1977:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s02YnORALXM
No, but I now understand. Muscoop often humbles me and proves that I am even dimmer than I thought. Somehow I've managed to make it in this world, but scoop often makes me wonder how...
Vane is a noun, so uhh... but, are they that vain? Yes. You saw it with the ice bucket challenge. yay yay yay, look at me. Guarantee you some of the people whose photo was leaked don't care much at all; are a bit turned on by it.
I remember as a kid the photo would come out and you would see people waving the photo to "make it develop faster". I always wondered if that was incredible BS or really did speed up the process. Mythbusters will have to do something with that one.
I'm the same way. But the reality is that certain patient data is worth its weight in gold for research purposes. What's interesting about our project is that it is harmonizing data to enable democratization of patient care.
To be honest, I think the movement is to get to the point where we can sell our own data. I'm fine with Google having my data, I'm fine with my medical records being available to researchers....however, I'd like to profit from that. There is a value to the users of my data, but it's my data. You can have it, if you pay me for it.
Just came out of a meeting at MS on this and our Chief Medical Info Officer pointed out that patients don't care about the data. The whole point of Big Data is to democratize information so that data isn't just sucked up into the ether repositories but so that it can be used in underserved populations by providers.