Understanding Privacy

ISBN13: 9780674035072 Condition: NEW Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark. Product Description Privacy is one of the most important concepts of our time, yet it is also one of the most elusive. As rapidly changing technology makes information increasingly available, scholars, activists, and policymakers have struggled to define privacy, with many conceding that [...] Read more »

EFF Joins With Internet Companies and Advocacy Groups to Reform Privacy Law

San Francisco - As part of a broad coalition of privacy groups, think tanks, technology companies, and academics, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today issued recommendations for strengthening the federal privacy law that regulates government access to private phone and Internet communications and records, including cell phone location data.

The "Digital Due Process" coalition includes major Internet and telecommunications companies like Google, Microsoft, and AT&T as well as advocacy groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT). The coalition has joined together to preserve traditional privacy rights and clarify legal protections in the face of a rapidly changing technological landscape.

"The federal law protecting Internet and telephone users' privacy was written nearly 25 years ago, which is eons ago in 'Internet time,'" said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston. "When it comes to privacy, EFF has had its disagreements with fellow Digital Due Process members such as Google and AT&T. But this diverse coalition of privacy advocates and Internet companies agree on at least one thing: the current electronic privacy laws are woefully outdated and must be updated to provide clear privacy protections that reflect the always-on, location-enabled, Web 2.0 world of the 21st century."

The group's four recommendations focus on how to update the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), a law originally passed in 1986 before the World Wide Web was invented and when the number of American cell phone users numbered in the tens of thousands rather than the hundreds of millions. The group recommends that the legal standards under which the government can obtain private communications and records be clarified and strengthened in order to:

* Better protect the privacy of communications and documents you store in the cloud

* Better protect you against secret tracking of your location through your cell phone or any other mobile device

* Better protect you against secret monitoring of when and with whom you communicate over the telephone or the Internet

* Better protect innocent Americans against government fishing expeditions through masses of communications data unrelated to a criminal suspect

"The recommendations of the Digital Due Process coalition are not an exclusive list of the reforms to ECPA that EFF would support, and in some cases EFF would urge even stronger protections than those urged by the group," said Bankston. "However, EFF strongly agrees with its fellow Digital Due Process members that each of the coalition's recommended changes would significantly strengthen the law and better protect privacy."

A full description of the coalition and its recommendations is available at www.digitaldueprocess.org.

Contact:

Kevin Bankston
Senior Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
bankston@eff.org

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Facebook At it Again: Privacy Policy Change to Share User Data

Facebook and the definition of privacy is still searching for a connection. Facebook once again changed its privacy policy to disadvantage users by sharing more of once private data with third party sites. This time the announcement came on Friday afternoon where it would more than likely not get much notice. Thanks to the vigilance of tech writers this did not go as quietly as planned. It is reported that Facebook's announced change strips away more user privacy rights. Users can no longer opt-out of sharing information about themselves with third-party web sites when using applications and connecting to links that take them to other sites. You must visit your "privacy settings" to change settings from "everyone" if you intend to limit access to your Facebook information.

Facebook changes continue to chip away at privacy, by Robert L. Mitchell Reality Check Blog, Computerworld, Friday, March 29, 2010

Facebook privacy changes would share user data with other sites, by Rob Pegoraro, Fast Forward Blog, Washington Post

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Screener Conducting Airport Whole Body Scanning Accused of Taking Nude Photo of Colleague

The allusion of privacy protection around the use of Whole Body Scanners is fading fast. An airport worker at the Heathrow International airport is cited by police for harassment after being accused by a female colleague of having taken a nude photo of her while she was undergoing a body scan. It was reported that he showed her the photo and she reported him to authorities who issued the 25-year-old male a harassment warning. The airport operated in the United Kingdom claimed to have taken many of the same steps outlined by the Department of Homeland Security Transportation Security Administration to protect the privacy of travelers being subjected to digital strip searches.

Airport worker given police warning for 'misusing' body scanner--Man, 25, issued with harassment warning after allegedly taking photo of a female colleague at Heathrow, Marck Tran, Guardian.co.uk

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Health Care Reform and Medical Privacy Not Mutually Exclusive

One of the Obama Administration's top priorities for its first year in office has been achieved, Public Law No: 111-148 the Patient Protection and Affordability Care Act will provide access to health care for over 30 million uninsured Americans. Part of the implementation of health care reform was the establishment of a national network for health information exchange. The design of the exchange and the rules governing who may have access to health information is closely debated in the patient privacy advocacy community. The American Recovery and Investment Act past early in 2009 provided extensive language regarding health information privacy, while the health insurance plan passed over the weekend allows access to medical information for research purposes without the patient's consent. Privacy equals control over who, when, why, and how another may access information about the data subject. There are not exceptions regarding control over access to data if there is to be privacy protection.

Your Medical Records Aren't Secure, Dr. Deborah Peel, Wall Street Journal Opinion, March 23, 2010

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EFF to Press for New Privacy Protections Against Hidden Video Surveillance in Senate Hearing Monday

Philadelphia - On Monday, March 29, at 10 a.m., the Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a public hearing in the Philadelphia federal courthouse on whether the federal electronic privacy laws need to be updated to better regulate secret video surveillance. Senior Staff Attorney Kevin Bankston of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) will testify.

Subcommittee Chairman Arlen Specter called the hearing in response to recent allegations that public schools in the Lower Merion School District in Pennsylvania have secretly used webcams on school-issued laptops to visually monitor students while they were in their homes. At Monday's hearing, Bankston will urge Congress to update the federal wiretapping statute to protect against secret video surveillance in the same way it protects against secret eavesdropping on private conversations. Such a change to the law would clearly require the government to obtain a search warrant before engaging in secret video surveillance of private places and would protect against similar spying by non-government actors, such as stalkers, computer criminals, private schools, private employers and others.

"It doesn't make sense that federal law regulates secret eavesdropping but doesn't equally protect us from secret video surveillance, which can be even more invasive," said Bankston. "Just as the federal wiretapping statute protects against electronic eavesdropping, it should also protect against secret video recording, whether in the home or in any other place where people have a reasonable expectation that they are not going to be photographed."

WHO:
Kevin Bankston
Senior Staff Attorney, Electronic Frontier Foundation

WHAT:
"Video Laptop Surveillance: Does Title III Need to Be Updated?"
U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs

WHEN:
10 a.m.
Monday, March 29

WHERE:
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
Courtroom 3B
601 Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106

For more on the hearing:
http://judiciary.senate.gov/hearings/hearing.cfm?id=4492

Contact:

Rebecca Jeschke
Media Relations Director
Electronic Frontier Foundation
press@eff.org

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Andy Oram’s Blog Topic: What is EPIC Up to Now!

Andy Oram editor at O'Reilly Media spent a morning at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) last week and got a rare peek into how the organization does its work. After 15 years, EPIC remains one of the most influential privacy research centers in the nation. Further it is well respected by Data Privacy Commissioners and advocates outside of the United States. EPIC is extremely effective with a win record most policy makers envy. Online Privacy, Travel Privacy, Smart Grid Privacy, and Voter Privacy, and much more. A good organization fighting the right fight for the right reasons, without the big bucks and holding an impressive win record--something very rare in Washington DC politics.

Current activities at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, Andy Oram, The O'Reilly Radar, March 19, 2009

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PRIVACY.ORG Relaunches with New Features

PRIVACY.ORG, the first web site devoted exclusively to privacy issues, has a new look and new tools. PRIVACY.ORG provides daily updates on privacy stories in the news. PRIVACY.ORG features a Twitter news feed with all #privacy tweets. And PRIVACY.ORG highlights important campaigns, such as the current effort to suspend the deployment of airport body scanners. Twitter, Facebook, digg, Technorati, del.icio.us, and Linked In users can tag items to share with others. Researchers, reporters, policy makers, and consumers have helped make PRIVACY.ORG the top-ranked privacy site online today. Privacy.org is a joint project of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) and Privacy International.

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Facebook’s Beacon Privacy Violation Makes it 9M Richer

Facebook offered to settle all lawsuits that resulted from its failed Beacon application, which violated users' privacy. The Beacon application without user prior agreement reported online purchases to social contacts of users, which broke federal privacy laws and resulted in several lawsuits by unhappy customers. Facebook offered to settle one case in a bold move to dismiss all other cases around the country for 9M. About 6 million would be left after attorney fees to fund a foundation. The members of the 3 person foundation board were named in the settlement agreement. The board was established with 2 people, which included a Facebook executive. They had to agree on the naming of a third person who would help decide how to spend the 6M set aside for online privacy research.

Clever: Facebook Funds A Privacy Watchdog Group, Nicholas Carlson, Business Insider, Silicon Alley Insider, March 18, 2010

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