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Data Protection and the Open Society (DPOS)

Data Protection and the Open Society (DPOS). David Erdos Centre for Socio-Legal Studies University of Oxford. Purpose of talk. Introduce and get feedback on the core elements of my new Leverhulme DPOS project .

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Data Protection and the Open Society (DPOS)

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  1. Data Protection and the Open Society (DPOS) David Erdos Centre for Socio-Legal Studies University of Oxford

  2. Purpose of talk • Introduce and get feedback on the core elements of my new Leverhulme DPOS project. • Examines the tensions between the Data Protection and the core values of an “Open Society” – freedom of expression and information. • Broader aim from this of building a more principled and realistic DP regime. • Both project and the talk are structured around the key themes which will define my inquiry.

  3. Themes of Project & Talk • Foundations • Philosophy • Structure • Development • Synthesis • Future structure of Data Protection • Puzzles • Media • Research • Transparency

  4. Philosophy: The Data Protection Concept • Not very coherent or easy to handle concept Prevent misuse of personal information (within information management systems) • “Misuse” = invasion of individual privacy? Informational self-determination Other values = fair decision-making; preventing annoyance e.g. spam

  5. Philosophy: The Open Society Concept • Also a concept of many different variables and aspects Plural, decentralized and flexible society, rooted in a broad interchange of information and ideas b etween the individuals and communities which it comprises. Freedom of Expression Requirements for Transparency But need for balance even against privacy claims

  6. 1. Fair & Lawful Processing • Legitimating ground?( Ordinary Data v. Sensitive Data) • Notification (to DP Authority and Data Subject) • 2. Limited and compatible purposes Structure of DP: The Eight “Principles” • 3. Relevant (adequate, not excessive) • 4. Time limited • 5. Accurate • 6. Subject’ Rights Adherence • 7. Secure • 8. No export without “adequate protection” Exemptions exist but specific including as to purpose

  7. DP 1.0 (late 1970s – late 1990s) / DPA 1984 Development of Data Protection • Loosely worded principles • Discretionary DP Authority key “enforcer” • Limited internationalization • Exemptions based largely on pragmatism • DP 2.0 (late 1990s – current) / DPA 1998 • Tighter and more stringently worded provisions • Discretionary authority but also hard law • Extensive internationalization • Pragmatic exemptions plus journalism, literature & art

  8. Many fundamental questions remain e.g.: • What is DP for anyway? • What is “personal information”? • What role is there for private enforcement?

  9. Role of Foundations to DPOS Project • Provide critical grounding to more specific inquiries • Tally with the strongly historical approach of project • Help direct project towards engagement with broader debate on drafting on new Data Protection 3.0. Comparative survey of DP law & DP Authorities Archival, literature and case law analysis (UK-focus) Integrate questions into more specialized work

  10. 1. What is the Media(Journalism, Literature & Art)? DPOS Puzzle: The Media • 2. What DP Exemptions are/should be available to production of such material? • 3. What regime should govern the (re)use of material produced by the media especially that placed on the Internet?

  11. DP & Media: Examples of confusion • QUESTIONS AS TO SCOPE: • Google Street View • Politicians’ speech (Quinton v. Pierce 2009) • Blogs, personal websites (Lindqvist case 2003 etc.) • User-Generated Content: Ratings websites etc. • QUESTIONS AS TO STANDARDS: • WP 29 opinion on social networking photos re: consent • Rating websites (e.g. of teachers) Reflects deeper confusion about how to limit DP: (i) By scope of law; (ii) by principles; (iii) by exemptions

  12. DP & Media: Planned Work Historical analysis using archives etc. Analysis of law and case-law (comparative element) General interviews with key actors One or more specific case studies

  13. Case Study: Teacher Rating Sites • Aspect of freedom of expression • Data generated by millions of decentralized “speech acts” (UGC) • Focused is on public role activities • Difficult to set boundaries if to be regulated PRO-REGULATION ANTI-REGULATION • Database-focused • Worldwide, Full-Text Retrieval • Details can intimate (personality, character) • Strong likelihood of employer use • Long-standing DP Employment Code

  14. DPOS Puzzle: Research Governance • History of separate and (post DP Mk 2.0) more onerous regulation than the “media”. • Under-recognized influence on growth of formalized ethical and governance review. • Concern that such review restricting valuable research in the public interest. • Strong case that (much) Research is a (particularly valuable) form of Media (Journalism, Literature or Art)

  15. Research Governance: Planned Work • Doctrine • DP Research Provisions • Research & JLA Provisions • Academic Freedom Protections • Research Policies • Role of DP in development of policies • Content and interpretation of policies • Research Practice • Effect of policies on research practice • Extent policies seen as internally legitimate. Focus on UK but also comparative (incl. US) element.

  16. DPOS Puzzle: Transparency • WHAT STUDYING? • Freedom of Information (FOI) • Voluntary disclosure • Conflict of interest disclosure • Campaign finance laws etc. • WHY? • Raises similar DP-Open Society tension • Generally no formal DP exemptions • DP-FOI interface generated significant case law Dr. Pat on Flickr

  17. DP & Transparency: Planned Work Analysis of FOI law and case-law (comparative element) Small case studies regarding any role of DP in formation of e.g. disclosure legislation and/or conflicts of interest policies. Analysis of current understanding of the DP-FOI/Transparency Interface (possibly via a survey)

  18. Some (very) tentative conclusions • Data Protection is not in good health • Significant reason for that relates to the developments and conflicts DPOS examines • Analysis so far indicates both that: • A narrow purpose specific “media” exemption cannot properly accommodate open society values • In today’s environment no activity should be entirely exempt from the values DP aims to protect • Significant reform of law and practice is needed and this project aims to help chart a way forward.

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