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      Would ID cards be such a bad idea if they made things work a bit better? | Martha Gill

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 6 April - 18:00

    Libertarian politicians like Jacob Rees-Mogg are out of touch with a public comfortable with sharing its personal data

    ‘Britain has never been a ‘papers, please’ society,” said Jacob Rees-Mogg, speaking on his GB News radio show last week. “I’ve always loved the quotation from the historian AJP Taylor, who wrote that ‘until August 1914, a sensible, law-abiding Englishman could pass through life and hardly notice the existence of the state beyond the post office and the policeman’. But the world has changed… is it time to sacrifice freedom for administrative efficiency, and bow down to po-faced officialdom?”

    What prompted this rallying cry for freedom? A subject that has ebbed in and out of public discourse for decades: whether or not every Brit should be required to carry an identity card. It ebbed in again last week when former Labour home secretary David Blunkett challenged Keir Starmer to set up a national ID scheme to tackle the small boats crisis, which in turn prompted the usual lines of debate.

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      Tories planned to make millions from members’ data with ‘True Blue’ app

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 4 April - 10:00

    Exclusive: senior party officials worked on commercial venture that would allow brands to sell products to supporters

    Senior Conservative party officials worked on plans to hand over its entire membership database for a commercial venture that promised to make tens of millions of pounds, the Guardian can reveal.

    Leaked documents show Tory executives discussed exploiting members’ personal data to build a mobile phone app that could track users’ locations and allow big brands to advertise to Conservative supporters. The party would take a cut of sales.

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      I regularly shared photos of my son on social media – until alarm bells started ringing | Hannah Nwoko

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 26 February - 08:00

    Like millions of doting parents, I wanted to keep others abreast of my child’s milestones. But the ‘likes’ weren’t worth the risks

    Social media is a strange place. On the one hand it can be a relentlessly toxic, dark cluster of ill intent; on the other, it can act as the glue that binds us to new communities, friends of the past and family we’ve almost forgotten. Nostalgia kicks in when we scroll through Instagram or Facebook and see life milestones from decades gone by. It’s a gentle reminder of life’s simple preciousness.

    That’s why it makes perfect sense that, according to some estimates, 42% of parents in Britain share photos of their children online. More than 50% of those parents share these photos at least once a month. A 2018 report by the children’s commissioner found that parents share about 71 photos and 29 videos of their child every year on social media. On average, by the time the child is aged 13, parents have posted 1,300 photos and videos of them to social media.

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      Serco ordered to stop using facial recognition technology to monitor staff

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 23 February - 16:07

    Biometric data of more than 2,000 staff at 38 leisure centres was unlawfully processed to check attendance, watchdog finds

    Britain’s data watchdog has ordered a Serco subsidary to stop using facial recognition technology and fingerprint scanning to monitor the attendance of staff at the leisure centres it operates.

    The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) found that the biometric data of more than 2,000 employees had been unlawfully processed at 38 centres managed by Serco Leisure to check up on their attendance.

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      ICANN Simplifies Requests For Hidden Domain Name Registration Data

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Thursday, 30 November - 08:01 · 3 minutes

    ICANN Much like regular websites operated by governments, companies, organizations, and the general public, most internet-based piracy services can be accessed using a domain name.

    From a user’s perspective, domain names are more easily remembered than IP addresses and remain the same despite IP address changes behind the scenes.

    Domain names also play an important role in conveying branding and as a result can be worth considerable sums of money. For companies enforcing their intellectual property rights, determining who owns a domain can prove invaluable as part of a wider investigation.

    When the General Data Protection Regulation ( GDPR ) came into effect in May 2018, it aimed to protect the personal data of EU citizens. That included those whose names appeared in public WHOIS databases as registrants or owners of domains.

    ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, responded with restrictions that on one hand protected registrants’ privacy , but on the other came at the expense of rightsholders’ being able to conduct meaningful WHOIS-based investigations.

    ICANN Accused of Hindering Rightsholders

    Potential problems had been flagged way ahead but workable solutions remained elusive. Increasingly vocal rightsholders including the RIAA and MPA criticized WHOIS restrictions and piled on with other shortcomings; WHOIS proxy/shielding services that hide registrant information, for example, and the lack of an effective system to ensure the accuracy of collected data.

    In an August 2023 joint submission to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), Hollywood, the recording industry, TV companies, the gaming industry and publishers left little doubt that patience had run out.

    RDRS: Registration Data Request Service

    With WHOIS protocols set to be replaced by RDAP (Registration Data Access Protocol), a technology designed to improve Registration Data Directory Services (RDDS), this week ICANN launched RDRS , an all new service to simplify access to non-public domain registration data.

    “Due to personal data protection laws, many ICANN-accredited registrars are now required to redact personal data from public records, which was previously available in ‘WHOIS’ databases,” ICANN explained.

    “With no one way to request or access such data, it can be difficult for interested parties to get the information they need. The RDRS helps by providing a simple and standardized process to make these types of requests.

    “The RDRS can be an important resource for ICANN-accredited registrars and those who have a legitimate interest in nonpublic data like law enforcement, intellectual property professionals, consumer protection advocates, cybersecurity professionals, and government officials,” ICANN added.

    Probably Not What Rightsholders Are Pleading For

    There appears to be little restriction on who can sign up for RDRS, something that already has some worried about what that could mean for their privacy. ComLaude confirms anyone can file a request but it doesn’t necessarily follow that information will be provided.

    RDRS is effectively a case management system for handling WHOIS data disclosure requests, rather than a database which can be interrogated, as WHOIS has been. Anyone can make a request, via the system, for certain non-public domain registration data. RDRS identifies the sponsoring registrar for the domain name and routes the request to them, subject to the registrar having signed up to be part of the system. Then, subject to applicable law, the registrar will make a determination on what, if any, requested data will be disclosed.

    Some rightsholders may be disappointed that the system only covers gTLDs such as .com, .net, and .org, plus new gTLDs including .xyz, .online and .horse. Common ccTLDs deployed at pirate sites, including .ag, .am, .cc, .me, .pw, .re, .sx, and .to, are excluded from the system.

    Hands-On Test

    Kevin Murphy at Domain Incite took RDRS for a spin and posted his first impressions of the service.

    “The system is defined largely by what it isn’t. It isn’t an automated way to get access to private data. It isn’t guaranteed to result in private data being released. It isn’t an easy workaround to post-GDPR privacy restrictions,” Murphy explains.

    “It is a way to request an unredacted Whois record knowing only the domain and not having to faff around figuring out who the registrar is and what their mechanisms and policies are for requesting the data.”

    Murphy also got the impression from interface settings that simply walking in off the street and requesting domain registration data might not be what ICANN has in mind. As a tool for rightsholders demanding so much more, it’s certainly nothing like what they have in mind.

    “The RDRS merely connects Whois data requestors — the default settings in the interface suggest that ICANN thinks they’ll mostly be people with court orders — with the registrars in charge of the domains they are interested in,” Murphy concludes.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      Private UK health data donated for medical research shared with insurance companies

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 12 November - 07:00

    Observer investigation reveals UK Biobank opened its biomedical database to insurance firms despite pledge it would not do so

    Sensitive health information donated for medical research by half a million UK citizens has been shared with insurance companies despite a pledge that it would not be.

    An Observer investigation has found that UK Biobank opened up its vast biomedical database to insurance sector firms several times between 2020 and 2023. The data was provided to insurance consultancy and tech firms for projects to create digital tools that help insurers predict a person’s risk of getting a chronic disease. The findings have raised concerns among geneticists, data privacy experts and campaigners over vetting and ethical checks at Biobank.

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      Connected car data privacy under investigation by California regulator

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 1 August, 2023 - 14:14

    electric vehicle, driverless car technology, SUV car side view. vector illustration

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    How automakers make use of data collected by connected cars is coming under scrutiny in California. On Monday, the California Privacy Protection Agency announced that it will review the data privacy practices of connected vehicle manufacturers. The agency is empowered to do so thanks to a 2018 state law , the California Consumer Privacy Act.

    "Modern vehicles are effectively connected computers on wheels. They're able to collect a wealth of information via built-in apps, sensors, and cameras, which can monitor people both inside and near the vehicle," said Ashkan Soltani, CPPA's executive director.

    "Our Enforcement Division is making inquiries into the connected vehicle space to understand how these companies are complying with California law when they collect and use consumers' data," he said in a statement.

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      Google hit with more privacy complaints for “deceptive” sign-up process

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 1 July, 2022 - 16:08

    Google hit with more privacy complaints for “deceptive” sign-up process

    Enlarge (credit: 400tmax | iStock Unreleased )

    More than a billion people worldwide have signed up for Google accounts, clicking through screens promising that “your personal info is private and safe.” This week, Google’s sign-up process came under fire when European Union consumer rights groups issued new privacy complaints suggesting that the opposite is true—that Google intentionally designs default settings to deceive new users into granting permissions to harvest and share a broad swath of personal info.

    "The language Google uses at every step of the registration process is unclear, incomplete, and misleading," the European consumer organization BEUC told Reuters . BEUC is helping to coordinate a potential civil lawsuit in Germany and several new complaints to data-protection authorities from consumer rights groups in France, Greece, the Czech Republic, Norway, and Slovenia.

    The key issue in these complaints is how hard Google makes it for account users to choose privacy-friendly options. It’s much easier, the consumer groups argue, to set up an account to share personal info than to protect it. As Tech Crunch reported , Google designed a one-click “express personalization” option allowing data tracking, while “manual personalization” requires 10 clicks to turn off tracking.

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