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APEC vs APT?: The struggle for regional privacy standards

APEC vs APT?: The struggle for regional privacy standards. Graham Greenleaf ‘Terrorists & Watchdogs’ Conference, 8 September 2003 See http://www2.austlii.edu.au/~graham/ for updates / details. Regional privacy standards. There is no global standard

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APEC vs APT?: The struggle for regional privacy standards

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  1. APEC vs APT?: The struggle for regional privacy standards Graham Greenleaf ‘Terrorists & Watchdogs’ Conference, 8 September 2003 See http://www2.austlii.edu.au/~graham/ for updates / details

  2. Regional privacy standards • There is no global standard • One region (Europe) has successfully developed regional standards • Council of Europe Convention 1981 • European privacy Directive 1995 • The Asia-Pacific is the next most advanced region in privacy protection • Far less political and economic unity or uniformity • Starting the most important international privacy developments since the EU Directive ….

  3. Toward an Asia-Pacific standard • APEC’s privacy initiative • Chaired by Australia - US / Aust. initiative • Asia-Pacific Telecommunity (APT) • Chaired by Korea • Asia-Pacific Privacy Charter Council • A ‘civil society’ expert group • FTAA will also affect some countries • (Free Trade Area of the Americas)

  4. APEC’s privacy Principles • Australia chairs a working group of 10 countries since Feb 03 • Starting point: OECD Guidelines (1981) • What’s the purpose?: • A minimum standard where compliance will (somehow) justify regional free flow of person information • A standard which will encourage (minimum) protection in countries where there is none

  5. APEC’s privacy Principles - Progress or stagnation? • 5 draft versions in 6 months • Do not yet reach OECD standards • Only considering very minor improvements to OECD • V2 strengthened V1, but V3 and V4 far weaker for little apparent reason • Serious US input coincides with V3 • At best it offers ‘OECD Lite’ ….

  6. APEC’s ‘OECD Lite’ • Examples of weak and outdated standards • Based on Chair’s V4 (Aug 03) - now behind closed doors • No objective limits on information collection (P1) • No requirement of notice to the data subject at time of collection (P3) • Secondary uses allowed if ‘not incompatible’ (P3) • OECD Parts 1, 3, 4 and 5 all missing as yet • Farcical national self-assessment proposed (V1) • Why start from a 20 year old standard? • Most regional countries are not members • Recognised as inadequate (eg Kirby J 1999)

  7. The alternative: A real Asia-Pacific standard • Actual standards of regional privacy laws • Eg Korea, Canada, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Taiwan, Australia, Japan, Argentina • Principles stronger than OECD are common • Expert input is needed to identity this standard, not filtered through governments • Privacy Commissioner need a collective role • No equivalent yet to A29 Committee • Santiago (Feb 04) only offers input on implementation • Asia-Pacific NGO experts are developing the APPCC • We need to adopt and learn from 25 years regional experience, not ignore it

  8. Examples of high regional standards • Collection objectively limited to where necessary for functions or activities (HK, Aus, NZ - Can stricter) • Notice upon collection (Aus, NZ, HK, Kor) • Secondary use only for a directly related purpose (HK, NZ, Aus - Kor stricter) • Right to have recipients of corrected information informed (NSW, NZ) • Deletion after use (HK, NZ, NSW, Kor)

  9. APT privacy Guidelines (draft) • Asia-Pacific Telecommunity (APT) • 32 states via Telecomms ministries (etc) • Guidelines on the Protection of Personal Information and Privacy (draft), July 2003 • Drafting by KISA (Korea), with Asian Privacy Forum • Attempts to take a distinctive regional approach • Explicitly not based solely on OECD or EU (cl8) • Says OECD Guidelines ‘reflect … the 70s and 80s’ • ‘Concrete implementation measures’ unlike OECD • Allows more variation between States that EU • Emphasises role of government, not litigation • Adds new Principles in at least five areas …

  10. APT Guidelines - implementation • Legislation required + self-regulation encouraged • A privacy supervisory authority required • Supervision and complaint investigation • Data export limits may be ‘reasonably required’ to protect ‘privacy, rights and freedoms’; • free flow of information otherwise required • Limits on these guidelines only by legislation; only to the extent necessary for other public policies • Common character string need to deal with spam

  11. APT Guidelines - new Principles • No disadvantage for exercising privacy rights (A5(2)) • Notification of corrected information to 3rd party recipients (A6(4)) • ‘Openness’ of logic of automated processes (A7) • No secondary use without consent (A 14(2)) • Deletion if consent to hold is withdrawn (A16) • Duties on change of information controller (A19) • Special provision on children’s information (A34) • Personal location information Principle (A30) • Unsolicited communications Princple (A31)

  12. Conclusions • Why are APEC and APT so different? • Membership similar except for the USA • Australia’s APEC initiative had a defensive and outdated starting point (OECD) • Inadequate process: no collective expert input, and now behind closed doors • OECD Guidelines were by an ‘expert group’ • A more consultative, confident, and region-based APEC initiative is needed

  13. Coda: APPCC contribution • Asia-Pacific Privacy Charter Council • 35 non-government privacy experts from 10 regional countries, and growing • On 12/11/03, meeting to consider 1st working draft • Headings of Principles under consideration for Charter are over - only a first draft • Covers surveillance and intrusions as well as IPPs • An attempt to find a positive regional standard

  14. APPCC draftPart I - General Principles

  15. APPCC draft - Part II - Information Privacy Principles

  16. APPCC draft - Part III - Surveillance limitation principles

  17. APPCC draft - Part IV - Intrusion limitation principles

  18. APPCC principles - Part V - Implementation and compliance principles

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