I like that he talks a lot about IoT and how it demands new thinking; it's
an area I've become very familiar with.
Looking at the Consumer Privacy Bills of Rights language (Accordified
http://www.commonaccord.org/index.php?action=doc&file=Wx/gov/whitehouse/OMB/Legislative/Letters/cpbr-act-of-2015/Bill/CPBR_Act_Of_2015.md),
I see a framework that is aspirational, but it's still pretty familiar. It
doesn't have a lot of needed specifics (as the author seems to agree).
As I've been pointing out for a while -- I may have shared my Nov 2016
Gartner talk on this subject at some point in a WG or legal subgroup call,
see attachment for a relevant snippet -- we already have lots of sets
privacy principles.
Also, its enforcement provisions have no private right of action; it would
all be down to a government agency, somewhat EU GDPR-style, which wouldn't
be my preference. It was my understanding that it's the different bases for
privacy rights in the EU vs. US, human vs. property rights, that leads to
the GDPR enforcement regime. Maybe somebody can explain why I'm wrong...
GDPR, of course, starts to get into what my talk called "sharper-edged
criteria", deciding numerical boundaries and such (breach notification
deadlines! fines! what consent means!), which of course is where arguments
tend to crop up. That's where the US would have to go to have something
meaningful.
I do think and hope that the UMA business model -- suitably abstracted away
from UMA technology as required -- could usefully influence legislators and
regulators when it comes to identifying some of the necessary sharper-edged
criteria. As we noted on the last WG call
https://kantarainitiative.org/confluence/display/uma/UMA+telecon+2018-07-12,
*"...UMA can provide value in separating "personal information" services
from "protection" services"* -- and most laws have no conception that this
is even possible or important.
p.s. You can check out my Identiverse slides on how consent needs to be
retooled for IoT and the connected car era, involving UMA and IRM and
potentially even AI, here
https://www.dropbox.com/s/sxwl4rjm5lnqs6f/Identiverse%20Don%27t%20Pave%20Pri....
(Worth uploading this to the UMA wiki home page?)
*Eve Maler*Cell +1 425.345.6756 | Skype: xmlgrrl | Twitter: @xmlgrrl
On Sat, Jul 14, 2018 at 11:11 AM, James Hazard
Cam Kerry’s call for a better approach to privacy and data security is important and timely. Some time ago, I put his Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights into prose object format and did a sketch of how it could be directly adopted between consumers and companies in the format of a privacy policy. That uses contract law to effect micro-legislation, the “law of the parties.”
More generally, the World Economic Forum and others are working on this in the context of data sharing for epidemic response. We are exploring using work by Chatham House as a base for a universal, federated approach. I’ve written this up in the Google Doc below. It mentions some of the challenges of a legislative approach and can be understood to be a kind of crowd-source, internet-speed version of “common law” alternative Cam discusses. The Golden Rule hammered into very specific shapes by parties, advocates, groups, governments making decisions at their own levels.
UMA seems an important part of this. Colin also pointed out the fit with the Consent Receipt project.
Jim
A federated approach to the rules of data sharing: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rpmMPAbdEEKRGDCuZpA4AShTxYF1j JCHG8iudvMrTXk/
Cam Kerry’s CPBR - older work, and very relevant: http://www.commonaccord.org/index.php?action=list&file=Wx/ gov/whitehouse/OMB/Legislative/Letters/cpbr-act-of-2015/
On Jul 14, 2018, at 9:20 AM, John Wunderlich
wrote: Thanks Thomas;
There are also a couple of new books that UMAnitarians might look at:
Hartzog's Privacy's Blueprint https://www.amazon.com/Privacys-Blueprint-Battle-Control-Technologies/dp/067...
Waldman's Privacy as Trust https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/privacy-as-trust/C5F22BAD9EB53AF6C4098D... (a prior paper is available on SSRN https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2309632)
John Wunderlich, BA, MBA @PrivacyCDN https://twitter.com/PrivacyCDN
*Privacy Tools*
Kantara Initiative https://kantarainitiative.org/: Consent Receipt Specification https://kantarainitiative.org/confluence/display/infosharing/Consent+Receipt...
JLINC Labs https://www.jlinclabs.com/: Data Provenance Solutions https://www.jlinclabs.com/solutions/
"The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil.” ― Hannah Arendt https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/12806.Hannah_Arendt, The Life of the Mind https://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/122534
On 14 July 2018 at 10:41, Thomas Hardjono
wrote: Dear UMAnitarians,
You might find this article interesting: "Why protecting privacy is a losing game today—and how to change the game".
https://www.brookings.edu/research/why-protecting-privacy- is-a-losing-game-today-and-how-to-change-the-game/
Best
-- thomas --
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