210 likes | 286 Views
Privacy Practices of Israeli Public Web Sites February 2004. Dr. Michael Birnhack & Dr. Niva Elkin-Koren Haifa Center of Law & Technology Supported by the Burda Center for Innovative Communications at Ben-Gurion University. Regulation of Online Privacy. Law Market forces Technology
E N D
Privacy Practices of Israeli Public Web SitesFebruary 2004 Dr. Michael Birnhack & Dr. Niva Elkin-Koren Haifa Center of Law & Technology Supported by the Burda Center for Innovative Communications at Ben-Gurion University Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Regulation of Online Privacy • Law • Market forces • Technology • Is the law effective? • Law in the books vs. Law in action Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Research Goals • Examining the application of the Privacy Act of 1981 among Israeli Public Web Sites • Comparing the law with statements addressed to users (phase II: comparing the above with the actual practices) • Assessing the relevance of the law • Regulation of digital privacy • Regulation of digital environment Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Method of Research • Defining the scope of the research • Classification of sites according to practices: • Information Collectors • Non-Collectors • Privacy Policies: • Finding them…, and • Analysing them in light of legal requirements Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Scope: Israeli Public Web Sites • Home pages • no internal pages (http://haifa.ac.il/law) • no sub-sites (excludes geocities-like sites) • Israeli sites (<.il>) • Top third level domain • http://haifa.ac.il, not http://infosoc.haifa.ac.il/ • Active sites only (only about 50% active) • Sites operated by Public bodies and licensed ISPs Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Examined Populations Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Legal Requirements: Privacy Protection Act of 1981 • Database: • Collection of electronic information, with the exception of: • Personal collection • Communications data only • Obligation of Registration, if: • 10,000+ people, or • “sensitive information”, or • Information obtained by third parties, or • Public database, or • Direct marketing. Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Notice • S. 11 of the Privacy Act: • A request aimed at a person, for the provision of information to be held in a database, should be accompanied with a notice: • Is there a legal duty to provide the info.? • The purpose for which the info. is sought • Will the info. be disclosed to third parties? To whom? For what purpose? Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Results Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Results Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Results Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Notice • S. 11 of the Privacy Act: • A request aimed at a person, for the provision of information to be held in a database, should be accompanied with a notice: • Is there a legal duty to provide the info.? • The purpose for which the info. is sought • Will the info. be disclosed to third parties? To whom? For what purpose? Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
The Content of Privacy Policies • 30% of Information Collecting Sites have a privacy policy of some sort • 75% do not indicate whether info. is collected • 60% did not indicate the purpose of the collection of info. • 90% did not indicate whether there is an obligation to provide info. Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Privacy Act of 1981 • S. 13: Right of Access • Data subject is entitled to access information about her held in database • S. 14: Right of Amendment • If information is inaccurate, subject has the right to require amendment Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Results • Number of sites which indicate the right of access and/or the right of amendment: ? 0 Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Data Security • S. 17 of the Privacy Act of 1981: • The owner of a database… is responsible for the security of the information stored in the database. Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Privacy Practices in Excess of the Act’s requirements • 21% of the sites which do not seem to collect information have a privacy policy • 70% of all sites, including sites which do not collect information, specifically announce that they secure the data. Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Summary of results • Low level of compliance • Low awareness • Vagueness of the concept of privacy • Enforcement failure • Privacy practices in excess of the Act: • Market forces • “law in action” • Future plans Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Other Countries • South Africa: Survey of top 100 sites: • 2/3 fail to comply fully with the law • -- Information Systems students, Cape Town University, AllAfrica.com, Sep. 7, 2003 • UK: Survey of 90 most popular websites: • only 2% were “totally compliant” with the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulation • -- WebAbacus research, BBC News, Dec. 14, 2003 Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Ramifications • Assumptions: • Non-deterministic view of technology • Privacy is an important value, and should subsist in the digital environment • Within the law: • Correct enforcement-failures, e.g., class actions; effective governmental supervision • Require disclosure of rights (access, amendment) • Indirect regulation: carrot & stick approach: • Incentives to provide privacy (e.g., US-EU safe harbor) • Disincentives to non-compliance • Private Ordering • Regulation by code Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004
Privacy Practices of Israeli Public Web Sites Thanks! • michaelb@research.haifa.ac.il • elkiniva@research.haifa.ac.il Birnhack & Elkin-Koren, Feb. 2004