April 8, 2014
The Washington Post reports, in A Facebook page of sneaky photos of women eating on the Tube creeps out London, on a strange Facebook Page which is devoted to surreptitious photographing of women eating on the London Tube and then posting them on Facebook (Women who eat on tubes). As idiotic as the concept is it is a page that has 19,000 followers. The debate about the page revolves around mysogeny and eccentric and harmless fun or even art. One important issue is the privacy of those who have had their photos taken. In UK jurisprudence the Read the rest of this entry »
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April 7, 2014
That drone technology has the potential to create problems almost as great as the significant benefits it brings to civilian use has been obvious for almost the outset. In’River of blood’ after drone ‘hits’ Australian athlete the Age reports on a possible collision between a drone and an individual. There are competing versions of events. Whether someone was struck by a drone or not it matters little. The reported incident highlights the increasing use of drones in the public space. Drones purchased from hobby shops are inexpensive and operated by anyone who can stump up the cash. That is all it takes. Putting a camera on a drone Read the rest of this entry »
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April 4, 2014
Itnews reports in Experian investigated over data breach on a serious data breach at Experian. The scope of the breach involves access to social security numbers of up to 200 million people. Interestingly the focus of the investigation goes to whether there has been complience with data protection laws. While the law is not directly analogous in Australia the Privacy Commissioner now has significant powers to investigate data breaches. What does not exist yet is mandatory data breach notification laws. Such a law almost passed in 2013.
It provides:
US law enforcement teams are jointly investigating a serious data breach involing a subsidiary of credit reporting firm Experian that exposed the social security numbers of some 200 million people to potential criminal activity.
The focus of the Read the rest of this entry »
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April 3, 2014
I had the pleasure of attending a public lecture hosted by the Castan Centre on Surveillance and the right to privacy in a digital age (see here) by Kenneth Roth, the Executive Director of Human Rights Watch. It was a very useful overview of one of the biggest public policy issues relating to privacy, mass and untargeted surveillance.
Mr Roth has been active in the media in the last week and published an opinion piece in the Fairfax press, Privacy: rationales governments use to claim mass snooping is legal, which is a very interesting overview of the developments in privacy protections since Read the rest of this entry »
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On 31 March 2014 the Australian Retail Credit Association (the “ARCA”) has applied to vary the Credit Reporting Code to extend from 5 days to 14 day grace period for repayment history to be classified as a missed payment.
The Privacy Commissioner is considering the application. It is unlikely that he will reject it. It is a pro consumer amendment being sought by the ARCA.
The CR Code is found here
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April 2, 2014
The Economist has taken a keen interest in drone technology of late and has had an abiding interest in technology. Those two themes come together in Eyes in the skies which looks at the use of unmanned aerial vehicles by journalists. The article also deals briefly with the privacy issues.
It provides:
THE news footage is striking: fires burn on the streets of Kiev; scorched banners flutter on buildings; madding crowds stumble through the chaos below. It is also strange: although aerial, it does not look as if it was shot from a helicopter. The camera flies right up to burning buildings; people on the ground so Read the rest of this entry »
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April 1, 2014
One of the key issues with the interpretation of the Australian Privacy Principles is the extent to which organisations will need to keep up to date with data security protocols, programs and preventative methods to avoid a hacking attack. The fact that an organisation is hacked does not mean, ipso facto, it has not complied with the APPs. That said a breach Read the rest of this entry »
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March 31, 2014
In 2009 the newly minted President of the United States, President Obama, spoke to some school children and cautioned them about what they put on Facebook. It is reported by the Huffington Post in Obama On Facebook: “Be Careful What You Post”.
At that time he said:
“Whatever you do,” he told them, “it will be pulled up later in your life.”
Prescient comments then and equally applicable today, if not more so with Big Data and sophisticated algorithims. Advice that is not heeded by those who take selfies after sex, as reported in Why are couples taking #aftersex selfies? A spectacularly stupid practice at any age.
In the Age’s article Online: Parents urged to be careful with child-related information the issue covered relates to Read the rest of this entry »
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Ars Technica reports in Philips Smart TVs wide open to Gmail cookie theft, other serious hacks regarding serious security flaws that could allow hackers to steal information from attached USB sticks and pilfer authentication cookies which could give them access to Read the rest of this entry »
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The collection of metadata is a growing area of concern for privacy practitioners, advocates and regulators. Big data, with every more powerful computing power and more sophisticated algorithims, have Read the rest of this entry »
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