Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Privacy, Data protection and Lex Informatica -- lecture 2 Dr. Lee A. Bygrave, 10.2.2006 Catalysts for data protection law • Technological-organisational trends, particularly as regards data processing • Public fears • Legal factors Technological-organisational developments (1) • Growth in amount of data stored • Integration of these data – plans for centralised data registers – introduction of PIN systems – national census plans • Increased sharing of data across organisational boundaries • Growth in re-use and re-purposing of data Technological-organisational developments (2) • Increased risk of data misapplication • Information quality problems – US surveys – tendency to ignore quality issues – poor “cognitive” quality Technological-organisational developments (3) • Diminishing role of data subjects in decision making processes affecting them – increasing reliance on “digital persona” • Increasing “anonymisation” of transactions – reduction in “cognitive sovereignty” Technological-organisational developments (4) • Causative factors: see list in lecture 1 – information appetite of organisations – economic significance of information • IRM, data warehousing, data mining • Appeal of IT – enhance performance efficiency (and appearance of efficiency) – fascination for the “technically sweet” Fears (1) • Two main kinds of fears: – fears over threats to privacy and related values – economic fears • Three sets of first kind of fear: – Power imbalance – Loss of control over technology – Dehumanisation Fears (2) • First kind of fears nourished by: – – – – – trauma of fascist oppression Watergate dystopian visions certain types of IT (mainframe computers) increased risk consciousness (Beck) • Surveys of public attitudes to privacy – what do these tell us? Fears (3) • Second main kind of fear: – focuses upon potential for restricting TBDF and thereby trade in goods and services – manifest particularly with OECD Guidelines, EC Directive on data protection, APEC Privacy Framework • Data protection laws as instruments for economic protectionism? – Lack of solid evidence Legal factors (1) • Positive legal factors – international human rights, especially right to privacy • Art 12 UDHR, Art 17 ICCPR, Art 8 ECHR – rights in national constitutions • German Federal Constitutional Court -- Census Act decision of 1983; Hungarian Constitutional Court -PIN decision of 1991 – administrative law; doctrines on rule of law Legal factors (2) • Positive legal factors (cont’d) – right to privacy/personality in statute and case law • Norwegian Supreme Court decision of 1952 on film screening; US case law – rules on defamation, discrimination, intellectual property, fair labour practices – role of property doctrines? – role of FOI law? Legal factors (3) • Negative legal factors: – pre-existing rules found insufficient – pre-existing rules sometimes privacythreatening • Swedish tradition of open government / FOI – cross-fertilisation process • development of data protection guarantees in international human rights law