[governance] BBC links:Privacy Concerns over States/Corporations'Use of Personal Info

mashi3981 at yahoo.com mashi3981 at yahoo.com
Fri Dec 15 04:50:38 EST 2006


Just thought the following links might be useful to
you.

The BBC news articles below address privacy concerns
over states' and corporations' use of personal data.
The basic summary is the following:
1. States collect personal info by various methods
(eg:CCTV/closed-circuit TV in roadways).
Corporations collect personal info by various means
(eg:credit card transactions).
2. The info collected by a single entity 
(state/corporation) is considered 
SEPERATELY BY ITSELF. The combination of
data collected by different entities is NOT 
considered by many people.
3. Corporations are now building their businesses
by DATA MINING on previous customer interactions with
them. This is common practice.
4. If there are no safeguards to prevent corporations
from **SHARING** personal info with other
corporations/state, then IN THE FUTURE, an ECONOMY
based on personal info will come up (eg: a business
targets only rich customers based on info obtained
from their bank records, insurance companies may turn
down requests based on info obtained
from health services etc).
5. If there are no safeguards to prevent state
agencies from **SHARING** personal info with other
state agencies/corporations, it could lead to SOCIAL
DISCRIMINATION.
(eg: Traffic police may stop cars to do checks based
on
info obtained from other state agencies regarding race
of the driver of car. ie. linking number plate to
name, name to race, and race to probability of person
committing a crime).
6. Different ways outlined are CCTV(closed-circuit
TV), number plate recognition, shop RFID, mobile phone
triangulation, store loyalty cards, credit card
transactions, electoral rolls, health service records,
TV preferences recording, worker monitoring etc
       Although some of them apply to only DEVELOPED
COUNTRIES (like CCTV), many could also apply to
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES (like credit card transactions,
mobile phones).
7. Concerns outlined are 
   a. loss of privacy
   b. loss of choice/consent by consumers
   c. discrimination
8. IN THE FUTURE, when RFID (radio-frequence ID) tags
become	cheap, they could create 'AN INTERNET OF
THINGS'.
9. There are great risks if the info contained in the
databases are wrong/inaccurate or if it falls into
wrong hands.

*How we are being watched -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6110866.stm
*Britain is 'surveillance society' -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6108496.stm
*Q&A: Radio-frequency ID tags -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6055296.stm
*Trust warning over personal data -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/5172890.stm
*Is business the real Big Brother? -
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5015826.stm

Thanks,
Mashi
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