Title: Search engines and Law
1Search engines and Law
- Implications of a centralized architecture of
search for civil rights
2Joris van Hoboken e-mail vanhoboken_at_ivir.nlIns
titute for Information Law University of
Amsterdam
PhD focusing on regulatory aspects of search
engines Background Academic degrees
Theoretical Mathematics, Law Special interests
Interaction between Information Technology and
civil rights Worked for Bits of Freedom
3SEs raise many issues for law
- dominance, competition
- implications of commercial business model
- hidden biases
- no transparency of technology (decisions)
- freedom of expression, freedom to information
- catalysts of harm to people or property
- data privacy, informational privacy
4Search engine dynamics
THE STATE?
5Closer look at two civil rights
- freedom of expression
- freedom to respect of ones private life
6Freedom of expression
- Search regards the freedom of expression, because
its functioning is crucial for the forming of
ones opinions.
7European Convention on H.R.
- Article 10 Freedom of expression
- 1 Everyone has the right to freedom of
expression. This right shall include freedom to
hold opinions and to receive and impart
information and ideas without interference by
public authority and regardless of frontiers.
This article shall not prevent States from
requiring the licensing of broadcasting,
television or cinema enterprises.
8Freedom to information
- There is no separate civil right of freedom to
information outside of the government sphere.
There is a right of the public to be
well-informed. The State has a positive
obligation to guarantee - Diversity
- Media pluralism
9Search Engines public interests
- Important question
- Is there a role for the State with regard to
search engines, to promote certain public
interests and which instruments can be used for
this goal?
10Which public interests
- Diversity, autonomy, access to information,
community, security - Hypothesis
- The State could end up stressing some public
interests over others, such as security.
11Prof. Niva Elkin Koren (Israël)
- Users' generated content displaces the old
intermediaries of public discourse, such as
publishers and mass media with new
intermediaries which facilitate access and
identify relevant information in situations of
information overflow The seemingly
disintermediated environment is highly
dependent on search engines. What are the
ramifications of governing access to information
in a way that is also vulnerable to systematic
surveillance?
12Side Step I Telecommunications
- If you look at recent telecom regulation, you see
a development of new laws, so to make them into
the extended arms of law enforcement agencies. - Example Data retention directive
13"Yeah - we used to call them cell phones. (The
Doctor Fun Archive)
14Side Step II SEs libraries
- Should we think of search engines as replacing
libraries? - How are libraries governing their public task of
opening up knowledge?
15Respect for private life
- The new intermediary relies heavily on processing
personal data for providing and structuring their
services. It is one of their most important
economic assets - Contractual relation with intermediary
- Personalized search
- Other services, such as e-mail, alerts, shopping,
etc
16What happens with these data?
- More often then not
- Stored for indefinite period
- Available for indefinite future services
- Usually not shared with third parties, but
available for law enforcement authorities under
applicable laws. (National security, police,
etc..)
17Access to data for criminal law enforcement
- New law in the Netherlands since 1 January 2006,
that makes it possible for public prosecutors to
demand personal data from all sectors. - Libraries were the only sector to raise
significant opposition during the drafting of
this law in 2004/2005. They started a campaign
Dont give Big Brother access to our libraries!"
18This law applies to search engines too
- All search data, logs, personal data, etc.. is
available for criminal law enforcement when
relevant for the investigation. - Not only search data of a suspect
- In the US the laws granting access are even more
permissive.
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20Benefits of decentralized, open source search
architecture
- Transparency
- Protection by software-architecture
- No central databases with personal data
- No central point of control of content, or easy
possibility of filtering - The biggest computer is owned by the users
21Challenges