Title: Politics and privacy engineering
1Politics and privacy engineering
- Dr Ian Brown
- Oxford Internet Institute University of Oxford
2Revenue Customs lose 25m records
- Two discs containing names, addresses, DoB, NI
no. and bank details of 25m people lost in the
post - Chairman of HMRC immediately resigned
3Prime Ministers Questions 21/11/07
4Impact on public opinion
Data YouGov tracker poll for Daily Telegraph,
28/3/2008
5Simple audit protocol
- NAO I do not need address, bank or parent
details in the download are these removable to
keep the file smaller? - HMRC I must stress we must make use of
existing data we hold and not overburden the
business by asking them to run additional data
scans/filters that may incur a cost to the
department.
65,000 of code
- SELECT Recipient_ID, Date, Amount
- FROM Child_Benefit_Payments
- gpg -er NAO benefitdata.csv
7Privacy-enhanced audit
- For each recipient, send to auditor
(Recipient_ID, hash(shared_random, recipient
data)) - Auditor requests sample of x records
- Only those records are sent, and can be checked
against bit commitments
8Individuals affected by UK data breaches since
July 2006
9Basic security needed
- Encrypted stored and in-transit data
- Access control
- Need-to-know
10Measuring system security requirements
- Scale and complexity
- Number of users
- Sensitivity of data
- Connections to other systems, particularly
untrusted - Connectivity to the Internet
- Attractiveness as target
Source B. R. Gladman and I. Brown (2007)
Security, Safety and the National Identity
Register. In S. G. Davies I. Hosein (eds), The
Identity Project an assessment of the UK
Identity Cards Bill and its implications, London
School of Economics pp.187-200.
11Software quality is key
- Prof. Martyn Thomas almost every IT supplier in
the world today is incompetent the typical rate
of delivered faults after full user acceptance
testing from the main suppliers in the industry
over many years has been steady at around 20
faults per thousand lines of code. We know how to
deliver software with a fault rate that is down
around 0.1 faults per thousand lines of code and
the industry does not adopt these techniques.
Evidence to Home Affairs Select Committee,
24/2/2004
12Insider fraud
Source What price privacy?, Information
Commissioner, May 2006
13Key privacy engineering steps
- Understand your problem
- Design system to minimise collection, storage and
access to personally identifiable information - Engineer security system to enforce privacy
policies - Enforce controls and audit remaining accesses
Source S. Marsh, I. Brown and F. Khaki (2008)
Privacy Engineering. Cybersecurity KTN white
paper
14NHS Connecting for Health
- 20bn programme
- Patient Summary Care Records stored on
centralised database (Spine) with pointers to
Detailed Care Records in regional databases - Emergency treatment and research
15Efficacy of NPfIT
- Emergency clinicians treatment styles
- Public opposition to unconsented research
Source The Use of Personal Health Information in
Medical Research, Medical Research Council, June
2007 pp.54-55
16Confidentiality problems
- Sealed envelope limits access to especially
sensitive records but can be opened by the NHS
and police and doesnt actually exist yet! - Pretexting found in N. Yorkshire HA to be
occurring 30 times per week (Anderson 1996) - Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust found 70,000
cases of "inappropriate access" to systems in 1
month - South Warwickshire General Hospitals NHS Trust
allows AE clinicians to share smartcards due to
60-90s login times
17General Practitioners worries
- 50 of GPs will refuse to upload medical records
to central "Spine" without patients' permission - 80 think Spine puts patient confidentiality at
risk - 79 think new system will be less secure
Source Medix poll of 1,026 representative GPs,
Nov. 2006
18ContactPoint eCAF
- Database storing details of 11m UK childrens
contact with social services, police, health and
education - 330,000 users
- 50 children will have detailed seven-page
assessment
Cornwall County Council
19Purposes of ContactPoint
- Protecting children from abuse or neglect,
preventing impairment of their health and
development, and ensuring that they are growing
up in circumstances consistent with the provision
of safe and effective care which is undertaken so
as to enable children to have optimum life
chances and enter adulthood successfully. - Victoria Climbie case
- Crime prevention
Source R. Anderson, I. Brown, R. Clayton, T.
Dowty, D. Korff and E. Munro (2006) Childrens
Databases - Safety and Privacy. Information
Commissioners Office
20Efficacy of ContactPoint
- The practitioners in contact with Victoria knew
of each others involvement and shared
considerable amounts of information. The crucial
errors arose from individuals either not paying
attention to the information, or giving it a
benign interpretation so that the risk to
Victoria from abuse was not seen. -Anderson et
al. - Wood for trees Dr Liz Davies
- Resources and evidence base for interventions
Source R. Anderson, I. Brown, R. Clayton, T.
Dowty, D. Korff and E. Munro (2006) Childrens
Databases - Safety and Privacy. Information
Commissioners Office
21Efficacy of ContactPoint
- Any notion that better screening can enable
policy makers to identify young children destined
to join the 5 per cent of offenders responsible
for 50-60 per cent of crime is fanciful. Even if
there were no ethical objections to putting
potential delinquent labels round the necks of
young children, there would continue to be
statistical barriers. -Prof. David Farrington - Impact upon family autonomy
Source R. Anderson, I. Brown, R. Clayton, T.
Dowty, D. Korff and E. Munro (2006) Childrens
Databases - Safety and Privacy. Information
Commissioners Office
22UK National Identity Scheme
S. G. Davies I. Hosein (eds), The Identity
Project an assessment of the UK Identity Cards
Bill and its implications, London School of
Economics p.25
23Purposes of NIS
- Anti-terrorism
- Social security fraud
- Identity fraud (1.7bn pa)
- Illegal immigration
- Sense of community
24Efficacy of NIS
- If you ask me whether ID cards or any other
measure would have stopped the London bombings,
I can't identify any measure which would have
just stopped it like that. -Charles Clarke MP,
former Home Secretary - Benefit fraud that relies on false identity was,
at most, 1 or 2 per cent of the total. -Peter
Lilley MP, former Social Security Secretary - The Home Office's definition of ID fraud doesn't
match our definition. We class it as a more
serious crime that involves a great deal more
hassle than just having your card stolen and
having to phone up the bank to cancel it -APACS
25Efficacy of Identity Scheme
- "If stop and search is anything to go by, for
Black people our ID card is really the colour of
our skin. Karen Chouhan, 1990 Trust - Terrorists rarely conceal their identity, only
their intention - as was apparent in the case of
those involved in the 9/11 tragedy, and in Madrid
and in Constantinople. -Peter Lilley MP
26IT and the smaller state
- "Never again could there be projects like
Labour's hubristic NHS supercomputer The basic
reason for these problems is Labour's addiction
to the mainframe model - large, centralised
systems for the management of information.
-David Cameron MP - As chancellor, Brown relentlessly pursued his
forlorn vision of a joined-up identity
management regime across public services. As
prime minister, he continues this vain search,
like an obsessed alchemist, for a giant database
that his closest advisers ominously refer to as a
single source of truth. -David Davis MP
27Conclusion
- Privacy engineering is key to making privacy
meaningful in information societies - Collect then protect is a fundamentally broken
model - Understanding problem domain is critical
- Privacy has become a key element in UK politics -
central to debate over effective checks on state
power