Spurr v Matilda: settled on confidential terms….appropriate in the circumstances

December 8, 2014

The Federal Court proceeding of Professor Barry Spurr v At Large Media Pty Ltd ACN 144 75 316 & Anor  has resolved today.

The Court per Wigney made the following orders by consent:

BY CONSENT THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

  1.  The First and Second Respondents be restrained for further using, publishing and/or disclosing the contents and/or substance of any email to or from the Applicant which is in the possession, custody or control of the First and/or Second Respondents without the Applicant’s express written authority.
  2.  The names and identities of the individuals referred to in paragraphs 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 16 and 17 of the Applicant’s affidavit sworn 21 October 2014 not be published.
  3. Any document (including the Applicant’s emails) revealing the identity or name of any individual addressed or referred to in the Applicant’s emails, including (but not limited to) the individuals names at paragraphs 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 16 and 17 of the Applicant’s affidavit sworn 21 October 2014 may only be distributed or disclosed to the legal representatives of the parties.
  4. The proceedings otherwise be dismissed, with each party to pay his or its own costs.

Any thoughts or hopes that this case would advance the law of privacy and confidentiality or just provide some judicial guidance on the operation of the Privacy Act have evaporated. Probably for the better.  It was not the best vehicle for an exposition on the law of privacy in general and the Privacy Act in particular.  As the orders make clear, both sides Read the rest of this entry »

Senator introduces a bill to ban government mandated weakenesses and access to security programs

December 5, 2014

A growing battle in cybersphere is that between those developing surveillance resistant and privacy enhancing technologies and governments, in particular security agencies and law enforcement bodies, who want access to some, and sometimes much more than that, data.  Encryption software of the Read the rest of this entry »

The Honourable Geoffrey Nettle appointed to the High Court today

December 4, 2014

The Attorney General has announced the welcome appointment of Justice Nettle to the High Court  today.

The release provides Read the rest of this entry »

Federal Trade Commission settle charges regarding privacy breaches by Medical Billing Provider

The Federal Trade Commission (” the FTC”) has announced a settlement with PaymentsMD LLC and its former CEO regarding egregious privacy invasive practices.  Consumers in signing up for an on line billing portal, to allow them to view their billing history, were in fact providing consent for the company and its partners to access their medical information.  By no reasonable measure could the authorisation constitute a proper consent for access to Read the rest of this entry »

Sony Pictures’ data breach shows why proper data security is critical

December 1, 2014

The major data breach of Sony Pictures is resulting in a familiar wave of consequential loss and damage; cost of repair, reputational damage and loss leading response to mitigate damage.  In Sony hires Mandiant to clean up after cyber attack the story focuses on the very expensive and embarrassing task of having outside security experts having to work through the cyber wreckage left by hackers.  The cost of the hack for Sony has been the leaking of valuable IP, in the form of yet to be released films as reported in  Upcoming Sony Pictures films leak online in wake of hack.  All of this highlights the critical importance of maintaining adequate data security and response strategies in the event of a breach.
Read the rest of this entry »

Drones behaving badly

In Thrill-seeking stunts elicit drone safety concerns the Sydney Morning Herald does a good roundup of how drones are both becoming more common, used more adventoursly and becoming a growing mobile safety concern. As a piece it is a reasonable Read the rest of this entry »

The growing conflict: encryption & data security v encryption against law enforcement. It can do both at the same time

November 30, 2014

The Economist in the excellent article Cryptography for dummies highlights the development in on line security which is both a boost and a bane for regulators.  Encryption is a key tool to Read the rest of this entry »

Federal Trade Commission takes action against debt sellers who released personal information

Earlier this month the Federal Trade Commission (the “FTC”) again flexed its regulatory muscles, this time in obtaining injunctions against Read the rest of this entry »

Privacy concerns regarding data breaches in the health system, hospitals in particular

Privacy and the medical sector should be synonymous. It is present in one of the world’s oldest oaths, the Hippocratic Oath.  The classical version Read the rest of this entry »

Cost to Home Depot from data breach reaches $43 million in just one quarter

Home Depot has the dubious distinction of suffering one of the biggest data breaches ever (I have posted on it here, here and here).  Which is saying something given the spectacularly large data breaches of the last few years. But the number of records accessed is only the start of a problem for an organisation which has had a major data breach.  There can be a major impact to Read the rest of this entry »