Title: Getting to Privacy
1Getting to Privacy
Presented by Mike Gurski
2Agenda
- Background on IPC
- Privacy whys and whats
- Online Risks (Offline too)
- Online Privacy
- Tasks
- Tools
- P3P
3Information Privacy Commission/Ontario
- established in 1988
- independent review of government decisions and
practices concerning access and privacy - resolve appeals,
- investigate privacy complaints,
- ensure compliance with the Acts,
- research access and privacy issues and
- educate the public about these laws.
4Whats Drives the Privacy Issue?
- Large organizations disconnected from clients,
gathering detailed data - Increasing amounts of personal data, held,
consolidated, used - New privacy invasive technologies
- Application of a technology paradigm geared to
manufactured goods on humans
5Privacy Security the Difference
6Privacy Data Security
7Privacy Defined
- Informational Privacy The protection and control
of any recorded information about an identifiable
individual.
8Some Headlines
- Stealing cards easy as Web Browsing
- Jan 14, 2000 NSNBC
- Vast online credit card theft revealed Hacker
hides 485,000 stolen cards on US government
computer - March 20, 2000 MSNBC
- CD Universe 300,000 cards hijacked.
9Some more Headlines
- The Illusion of Privacy
- National Post, Dec. 14, 1999
- Womans one-way trip on information highway
- Toronto Star March 23, 2000
- Web sites can follow a trail of your data,
recording every move - Ottawa Citizen, Jan. 18, 2000
10Online Risks
- Web Bugs
- Web CookiesCookie Synchronization
- Double Clicks
- Malicious code
- Viruses
11More Online Risks
- Unauthorized Access
- Snooping
- Spoofing
- Identity Theft
12Remedies
- Become Privacy Literate
- Know the Laws
- International
- National
- Provincial
- Visit the Web Sites
- Read the Books and Articles
13Privacy Literacy
- Why are you asking?
- collection purpose specification
- How will my information be used?
- primary purpose use limitation
- Who will be able to see my information?
- restricted access third parties
- Will there be any secondary uses?
- notice and consent unauthorized disclosure
14Who Has What Laws
- E.U.
- Canada
- United States
- Other Countries
15Current Global Environment
- E.U. Directive on Data Protection
- OECD Guidelines on E-Commerce
- C.S.A. Model Code for the Protection of
- Personal Information
- Canadas Personal Information Protection
- and Electronic Document Act (Bill C-6)
- Principles for Consumer Protection
- in Electronic Commerce- A Canadian Framework
- U.S. Safe Harbor Proposal
16Canadian Online Privacy Context
- Bill C-6 Personal Information Protection and
Electronic Documents Act
17The Canadian Privacy Legislative Framework
- Purpose
- support E-commerce strategy,
- enable business with Europe, and
- domestically to ensure Canadians feel secure in
delving into e-commerce
18Bill C-6 CSA Model Codes The Ten Commandments
- Accountability
- for personal information and shall designate an
individual(s) accountable for compliance of
principle - Identifying Purposes
- purpose of collection must be clear and done at
or before time of collection - Consent
- individual has to give consent to collection,
use, disclosure of personal information
19The Ten Commandments
- Limiting Collection
- collect only information required for the
identified purpose and information shall be
collected by fair and lawful means - Limiting Use, Disclosure, Retention
- consent of individual required for other purposes
- Accuracy
- keep as accurate and up-to-date as necessary for
identified purpose - Safeguards
- protection and security required appropriate to
the sensitivity of the information
20The Ten Commandments
- Openness
- policies and information about the management of
personal information should be readily available - Individual Access
- upon request, an individual shall be informed of
the existence, use and disclosure of her personal
information and be given access to that
information, challenge its accuracy and
completeness and have it amended as appropriate - Challenging Compliance
- ability to challenge all practices in accord with
the above principles to the accountable body in
the organization.
21European Union (E.U.)Directive on Data Protection
- Non-E.U. countries must be able to meet the
test of having an adequate level of data
protection. - The absence of private sector privacy
protection will serve as a non-economic trade
barrier with E.U. and Asia/Pacific-Rim countries.
22U.S. Proposed Safe Harbor Privacy Principles
- Notice
- Choice
- Onward Transfer
- Security
- Data Integrity
- Reasonable Access
- Enforcement
23Other Jurisdictions
- Australia to introduce legislation in the first
sittings of 2000 to strengthen self-regulatory
privacy protection in the private sector. - Asian countries, have developed or are currently
developing laws in an effort to promote
electronic commerce. - Self-regulation is currently the policy promoted
by the governments of Japan, and Singapore. -
24Other Jurisdictions
- Many countries in the South East region have
either adopted comprehensive privacylaws or are
currently in the process. Hong Kong and New
Zealand already have comprehensive acts in force.
Taiwans act covers the public sector and eight
areas of the private sector. The governments of
Thailand, Malaysia and India are all currently
developing comprehensive data protection
legislation. http//www.pco.org.hk/conproceed.
html
25 More Remedies
- Tasks
- Follow Ben Franklins Key Steps
- Be discreet
- Leave your SIN at home
- Go unlisted and non-published for your phone
- Get a P.O. Box
26More Tasks
- Check out a Webs Privacy Policy
- Never provide personal information
- over the phone,
- to unfamiliar web sites
- to clerks (be positive and insistent)
- Get encrypted
27Online Tools
- www.kburra.com (cookie control)
- www.esafe.com ( security sandbox, personal
firewall, antivirus) - www.ipc.on.ca (e-mail encryption made easy)
- www.zeroknowledge.com (pseudonymisers)
- www.iprivacy.com (secure financial transactions)
- Marit_at_koehntopp.de
28Privacy Resources
- www.ipc.on.ca
- www.privacytimes.com
- www.epic.org/privacy/tools.html
29P3P A Proactive Approach
- Platform for Privacy Preferences
- Consumer sets his/her privacy preference
- Web sites set their privacy policy
- P3P built into Browsers and Web sites
- Allows consumer to be more informed and choose
whether or not to proceed into a Web site
30P3P the June 21 Interop
- Invitation for your company to participate.
- www.w3c.org
- http//www.w3.org/P3P/interop
- Interested? Contact Lorrie Faith Cranor
lorrie_at_research.att.com
31How to Contact Us
Dr. Ann Cavoukian Ph. D. Commissioner, Information
Privacy Commission Ontario, Canada, M5S
2V1 Phone 1-416-326-3333 Web
www.ipc.on.ca E-mail Info.ipc.on.ca Mike
Gurski mgurski_at_ipc.on.ca