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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Tue Sep 30, 2014, 07:09 AM Sep 2014

Privacy 2.0: The Italian Record

http://watchingamerica.com/WA/2014/09/29/privacy-2-0-the-italian-record/

Privacy 2.0: The Italian Record
Published in L'Opinione delle Liberta (Italy) on 24 September 2014 by Elena D’Alessandri [link to original]
Translated from Italian by Bora Mici. Edited by Gillian Palmer.
Posted on September 29, 2014.

In the 2.0 world, the protection of personal data appears to have become today's hot topic. Very recently, Navi Pillay, U.N. high commissioner for human rights, maintained that digital surveillance has become a dangerous habit rather than an extraordinary measure, maintaining that those rights guarded offline should be protected in the same way even inside the digital ecosystem. In this respect, Italy seems to have made the first move. The Belpaese, often a taillight in European classifications as far as innovation and the digital are concerned, lagging in the development of bandwidth or the digitization of the public administration, has attained an important record on the subject of the protection of personal data.

In fact, our country was the first in Europe to put bolts on the doors of the Mountain View giant in order to guarantee a more efficient guardianship over its users' privacy — a job that lasted more than a year, and that saw side by side "Big G" and the Italian guarantor for private data, headed by Antonello Soro. The objective, as Soro himself declared, "was not to establish sanctions in the event of improper practices, but rather to write rules together that Google would have to adhere to." The provision does not limit itself to calling for respect for privacy, but indicates precise measures that Google will need to adopt to conform to the new law.

The introduction of this new standard constitutes a real revolution because from this moment on, it will no longer be taken for granted that whoever uses the services Google offers consents to the unconditional use of his or her own data. Even if the search engine has tried to comply with European rules on matters of privacy — especially after the Court of Justice's ruling on the “right to be forgotten” — many points remain unresolved. And it was precisely to correct these mistakes that the Italian authority intervened.

The critical points singled out by the guarantor relate to the inadequacy of the information provided to users, to the missing request for agreement on the proliferation of the data, and at other times to its retention. In this sense, Google will be required to clearly explain, in its general informational statement, that the data is collected and used for commercial purposes, for visible advertising, and to specify the ever more sophisticated techniques of proliferation that by now go well beyond simple cookies.
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