FreePint
 Supporting the value of information in your enterprise. How?

Features: Article

 

All FreePint Articles | Article Categories | Subscribe via RSS to get updates as soon as content is added to FreePint Features

Click to visit FreePint FeaturesPrivacy - more uncertainty and confusion
Saturday, 19th November 2011 Please login to be able to star items

By Tim Buckley Owen

Article:

Privacy experts in Britain seem set for a clash with the European Union over the right to be forgotten – while the internet industry is haltingly starting to address “Do Not Track” demands. Affecting both compliance and research, it all makes for continuing uncertainty which information managers can ill afford.

EU Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding and German Consumer Protection Minister Ilse Aigner have recently joined forces to discuss reform of the EU Data Protection Directive. Dating back to 1995, the Directive predates cloud computing (a classic case of the law trailing technology – see LiveWire comment) so one proposed revision is that EU citizens’ data should be protected regardless of the country in which the company that processes it is established.

Reding’s partnership with Aigner is significant; for historical reasons, Germany has a very strong privacy culture (LiveWire comment here) and a Eurobarometer survey cited in the report of their meeting suggests that three quarters of Europeans want the right to delete information about themselves whenever they choose (earlier LiveWire background here). But word coming out of one perennially troublesome EU member state – Britain – is that that’s simply impracticable.

In a speech to the Internet Advertising Bureau, a few days before Reding’s announcement, Britain’s Culture Secretary Ed Vaizey questioned the logic of trying to make firms outside the EU subject to EU law, when that could jeopardise the ability of European firms to make full use of the cloud. And he also pointed out that, when data could be copied and transferred across the globe instantly, the right to be forgotten was unenforceable.

Now Vaizey is a politician, trying not to fall between the two stools of civil liberties and barriers to business. But his views are backed up by a respected official; Britain’s privacy watchdog the Information Commissioner has also said in a briefing on the future of data protection in the EU (follow link to November 2011) that it should not introduce a standalone right to be forgotten because, besides being impossible to implement, it also raises false expectations.

Meanwhile, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is conscientiously pressing on with an attempt to comply with any Do Not Track legislation that may emerge. It’s recently released a draft document to define the meaning of a Do Not Track preference and set out practices for websites to comply with it.

At the moment, though, the draft poses more questions than it answers – including ones as fundamental as “Why are we doing this? What are people afraid of?” and “What is the definition of tracking?” Right now this all seems to be a case of technology following the law following technology, with neither side knowing what the other is capable of.


By Tim Buckley Owen

Tim is an information skills trainer and writer on the information industry with over 40 years' experience in the profession. His career has encompassed information management, writing, editing, training, government policy advice and corporate media & marketing.

Besides writing for FreePint, Tim runs courses for training providers and private clients on enquiry handling, abstracting & summarising, information packaging & presentation and information management. The sixth edition of his classic handbook Successful Enquiry Answering Every Time is published by Facet Publishing. You can find details of Tim's training services at www.buckleyowen.com.

Tim can also be reached at tim.buckleyowen@freepint.com

More articles by Tim Buckley Owen »



 

About this article

   

« See all Features Articles

 

Subscribe

FreePint SubscriptionPurchase a FreePint Subscription and gain access to all FreePint articles and reports to support your organisation's information practice, content and strategy.

Complete our request form and we'll tell you how we can help »


" FreePint has been an excellent resource to both myself and colleagues for furthering insight, bringing together snapshots of easily digestible ...







 

 

 

Keep up to date

FreePint Newsletter:

Bringing you the latest FreePint articles and tips by email twice a month.

Email:  

Join now free »


FreePint on Facebook:


FreePint on LinkedIn: