[e-privacy] EDRI-Gram: Declaration on Global Privacy Standards
Andrea Glorioso
andrea at digitalpolicy.it
Thu Nov 5 16:21:09 CET 2009
============================================================
3. Declaration on Global Privacy Standards
============================================================
The public voice coalition, where EDRi is also a member, gathered almost two
hundred privacy experts, advocates, and governments officials from around
the world for a civil society event in Madrid with the title "Global privacy
standards for a Global world".
Held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Privacy and Data
Protection Commissioners, the event was cybercasted, live blogged and tweted
in order to be available to any Internet user interested in the privacy
topics.
The conference had 5 different sessions, with two keynote speakers - Mr.
Stavros Lambrinidis, Vice President, European Parliament and Mr. Peter
Hustinx, European Data Protection Supervisor (Netherlands).
The first session Privacy and Human Rights: The Year in Review presented
several privacy issues from 2009 from different parts of the globe. The
European status was presented by Meryem Merzouki from EDRi-member IRIS,
France that highlighted the new threats brought by the Stockholm programme
or the different police databases with high-level privacy intrusion. There
was a specific interest from the audience on the status of EDVIGE 2.0.
Meryem confirmed that the civil society will react to the new police file,
while Peter Schaar has underlined that "Edvige is a horror database for us,
because it includes many persons that did not breach any laws - they are
just 'risky persons'."
The latest Privacy and Human Rights Report that covers 80 states was
launched with this occasion by Ms. Katitza Rodriguez, Electronic Privacy
Information Center.
The second session - Privacy Activism: Major Campaigns - was kicked off by a
lively presentation by EDRi-member Mr. Ralf Bendrath who explained what is
Privacy Activism 2.0. Mixing open structures, viral marketing, pop culture,
privacy issues with a healthy dose of fun was the perfect recipe for the
biggest demonstration ever against surveillance in Germany known in the
entire world as Freedom not Fear. Ms. Willemiem Bax from Consumer
Organization BEUC highlighted the consumers actions for the protection of
their digital rights, while David Rodríguez presented a creative local
campaign against CCTVs in the neighbourhood of Lavapies, Madrid.
"Your Data in the Cloud: What if it Rains? " was the inspired title of the
third session. EDRi's President Andreas Krisch pointed out with images from
NASA and German Federal Archive from 1962 and 1970 respectively that the new
technological developments do not change that much and we should address
more seriously the security aspects of cloud computing. He suggested as
ideas to be included in global privacy standards in cloud computing: data
breach notification, data minimisation as well as responsibility for IT
infrastructures introduce in the market (see RFID).
Moving even more in depth on the global privacy issues, there were
discussions on the transborder data flows. Eddan Katz from EFF showed the
real problems of the Safer Harbour privacy agreement between US and EU,
including the fact that it doesn't cover non-profits, because FTC oversight
on US side is only for companies. Gus Hossein from Privacy International
bluntly declared that we should stop using transborder data flows as a
Trojan horse in asking for data protection legislation in developing
countries. He insisted that just having a data protection act is not enough
and we should all focus on capacity building for this countries.
The last session presented the Civil society declaration: Global Privacy
Standards for a Global World, with the all representatives at the final
panel (Ms. Jennifer Stoddart, Privacy Commissioner, Canada, Mr. Jacob
Kohnstamm, EU Article 29 Group Vice-Chairman and Mr. Rafael García Gozalo
From the Spanish DPA) openly supporting the Declaration.
Live blogging from the event
http://edri.blogactiv.eu/
Madrid anti-CCTV campaign (only on Spanish)
http://unbarriofeliz.wordpress.com/
Global Privacy Standards for a Global World -The Civil Society Madrid
Declaration (3.11.2009)
http://bit.ly/IVO1m
Event's programme (3.11.2009)
http://thepublicvoice.org/events/madrid09/
Tweeting on the event
http://twitter.com/#search?q=%23globalprivacy
Stavros Lambrinidis speech - video (3.11.2009)
http://bitacora.palomallaneza.com/2009/11/03/stravos-lambrinis-en-tpv/
Andreas Krisch - Data protection in the cloud (3.11.2009)
http://www.edri.org/files/akrisch_TPV_CloudPrivacy_20091103.pdf
Meryem Merzouki - Privacy issues with EU Law Enforcement Cooperation
Developments (3.11.2009)
http://www.edri.org/files/Presentation_Meryem_EDRi_civil_society.pdf
--
Andrea Glorioso || http://people.digitalpolicy.it/sama/cv/
M: +32-488-409-055 F: +39-051-930-31-133
* Le opinioni espresse in questa mail sono del tutto personali *
* The opinions expressed here are absolutely personal *
"Constitutions represent the deliberate judgment of the
people as to the provisions and restraints which [...] will
secure to each citizen the greatest liberty and utmost
protection. They are rules proscribed by
Philip sober to control Philip drunk."
David J. Brewer (1893)
An Independent Judiciary as the Salvation of the Nation
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 196 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.winstonsmith.org/pipermail/e-privacy/attachments/20091105/17deb392/attachment.pgp>
More information about the E-privacy
mailing list