Peter Daniel Eckersley, an Australian computer scientist, computer security researcher, and activist has died at age 43. He died Sept. 2.
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Was Peter Eckersley married? Eckersley’s marital status is unknown.
Eckersley was prominent in internet privacy and was openly critical of web tracking technologies and companies that use them.
In 2007, he criticised Facebook for their lack of transparency in user tracking services as well as the use by internet service providers of deep packet inspection of peer-to-peer networks to seek out copyright infringement, often relying purely on IP addresses to identify users in court.

His later work in this field resulted in the Panopticlick, an EFF website to test the identifiability of users’ web browsers, as well as advocacy for stronger enforcement of the Do Not Track header.
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Eckersley was outspoken against the centralization of cloud hosting providers, particularly that of AWS, fearing that cloud providers could be compelled to look into users’ data, plausibly allowing a government agency to bypass the protections afforded by the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, such as was later seen in PRISM.
In 2021, he co-founded the non-profit AI Objectives Institute, conceived to interrogate the values and politics around artificial intelligence.
He also was a visiting senior fellow at OpenAI.
Eckersley’s research and policy work focused on applications including predictive policing, autonomous vehicles, cybersecurity, and military uses of artificial intelligence.


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