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APEC Privacy Framework

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Author :
Release : 2005
Genre : Computer security
Kind : eBook
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Book Synopsis APEC Privacy Framework by :

Download or read book APEC Privacy Framework written by . This book was released on 2005. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Five Years of the Apec Privacy Framework

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Author :
Release : 2012
Genre :
Kind : eBook
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Book Synopsis Five Years of the Apec Privacy Framework by : Graham Greenleaf

Download or read book Five Years of the Apec Privacy Framework written by Graham Greenleaf. This book was released on 2012. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The APEC Privacy Framework was developed from 2003, adopted by APEC in 2004 and finalised in 2005. It was intended as a means of improving the standard of information privacy protection throughout the APEC countries of the Asia-Pacific, and of facilitating the trans-border flow of personal information between those countries. In 2007 a number of 'Pathfinder' projects for cross-border data transfers were launched under the Framework. In the five years since the process commenced, what has it achieved, and what is it likely to achieve? This paper argues that the APEC Privacy Framework has had many flaws from its inception, including Privacy Principles that are unnecessarily weak, and no meaningful enforcement requirements. Five grounds of criticism of the Principles are put forward: (i) Weaknesses inherent in the OECD Principles; (ii) Further weakening of the OECD Principles; (iii) Potentially retrograde new Principles (The only new principles, 'Preventing harm', 'Choice' and the 'Due diligence in transfers' aspect of the Accountability principle, while capable of benign interpretations, carry inherent dangers and have little to recommend them); (iv) EU compatibility is ignored; and (v) Regional experience is ignored. The APEC Principles therefore do not represent any objective 'consensus' of existing regional privacy laws, unless it that of the lowest common denominator of every set of Privacy Principles in the region. In relation to enforcement, Part IV exhorts APEC members to implement the Framework without requiring any particular means of doing so, or any means of assessing whether they have done so. No means of assessment have yet been developed. The APEC Framework is therefore considerably weaker than any other international privacy instrument in terms of its implementation requirements, and its practices. Since its adoption in 2004, little attempt has been made to encourage its use as a minimal standard for privacy legislation in developing countries (which might have been useful), and it is having little impact on the significant number of legislative developments now taking place. Instead, the 'Pathfinder' projects seem to be developing toward a generalised version of the US 'Safe Harbor' scheme. What is known of the Pathfinder projects leaves many questions unanswered, such as what standards for data transfers they aim to implement; whether compliance with all of APEC's own Privacy Principles will be required; and how 'Accountability Agents' will be accredited. Consumer input into APEC's privacy processes has been belated and ad-hoc but business influences omnipresent. Despite these flaws, APEC could still play a useful role in the gradual development of higher privacy standards in Asia, provided its priorities are re-oriented. The major developments in Asian privacy protection are likely to come from elsewhere, including other regional groupings, and attractions of standards originating in Europe. The paper concludes with suggestions for other directions.

Inadequate

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Author :
Release : 2016
Genre :
Kind : eBook
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Book Synopsis Inadequate by : Stuart Hargreaves

Download or read book Inadequate written by Stuart Hargreaves. This book was released on 2016. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The author analyses the APEC Privacy Framework in light of Article 25 of the EU Data Protection Directive, which requires that a third country's data protection regime be found 'adequate' before transborder flows of personal data are permitted. The author contends that the two regimes reflect two different normative approaches to informational privacy. The APEC Framework treats informational privacy protections as tools that can perform useful regulatory roles in the market, and can therefore easily be balanced against other economic interests. In contrast, the EU Directive sees informational privacy as a fundamental moral right tied to notions of human dignity and autonomy, and is therefore limitable only in narrow circumstances. These two approaches result in different substantive and procedural protections in each regime. When one analyses the Framework using the Working Party's own approach to findings of adequacy, it is clearly lacking in both substantive and procedural terms. Were an APEC Member economy ever to implement the Framework as domestic data protection legislation in, the author contends that these weaknesses mean that the Commission ought to reject any application for adequacy. The author next considers whether the Commission should enter negotiations with APEC with an eye to converting the Framework into something resembling the Safe Harbor agreement it reached with the U.S. in 2000. This is rejected, however, on both practical and ideological grounds. The self-certifying Safe Harbor regime has failed to ensure the protection of European data that is transmitted to the U.S., and agreeing to another Safe Harbor style agreement threatens to weaken the normative core of the Directive, lessening the ability of Article 25 to encourage the global spread of robust data protection regimes. The best course of action for the Commission is to encourage third countries to improve their data protection regimes to the level truly required to be found 'adequate', rather than accepting substandard principles in the face of economic pressure.

Enabling Electronic Commerce

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Author :
Release : 2011
Genre :
Kind : eBook
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Book Synopsis Enabling Electronic Commerce by : Tammy L. Hredzak

Download or read book Enabling Electronic Commerce written by Tammy L. Hredzak. This book was released on 2011. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Global Privacy Protection

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Author :
Release : 2010-01-01
Genre : Law
Kind : eBook
Book Rating : 121/5 ( reviews)

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Book Synopsis Global Privacy Protection by : James B. Rule

Download or read book Global Privacy Protection written by James B. Rule. This book was released on 2010-01-01. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The distinguished editors and contributors to this book have produced a valuable report of the state of privacy in a number of jurisdictions with their distinct legal and political traditions. It highlights the challenges we confront in our effort to protect and defend a central democratic ideal. Raymond Wacks, Computer Law and Security Review . . . This book is. . . a seminal piece of literature. . . Although the volume is about privacy law and the international politics of data protection, it is vitally important for the whole field of surveillance studies. It is easy to follow, and written in a way that nonlegal scholars can easily grasp. Nils Zurawski, Surveillance and Society Global Privacy Protection is certainly to be commended. Daniel Seng, Singapore Journal of Legal Studies Global Privacy Protection reviews the origins and history of national privacy codes as social, political and legal phenomena in Australia, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, South Korea and the United States. The first chapter reviews key international statements on privacy rights, such as the OECD, EU and APEC principles. In the following chapters, the seven national case studies present and analyze the widest variety of privacy stories in an equally varied array of countries. They look beyond the details of what current national data-protection laws allow and prohibit to examine the origins of public concern about privacy; the forces promoting or opposing privacy codes; the roles of media, grassroots activists and elite intervention; and a host of other considerations shaping the present state of privacy protection in each country. Providing a rich description of the interweaving of national traditions, legal institutions, and power relations, this book will be of great interest to scholars engaged in the study of comparative law, information law and policy, civil liberties, and international law. It will also appeal to policy-makers in the many countries now contemplating the adoption of privacy codes, as well as to privacy activists.

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