[NCUC-DISCUSS] Fw: [Internet Policy] New report by UN Rapporteur on Privacy

Mueller, Milton L milton at gatech.edu
Sun Mar 5 16:56:43 CET 2017


Ayden
The idea of a “Geneva Convention for the Internet,” which was proposed by Microsoft President Brad Smith at the RSA conference, really has little to do with privacy or even surveillance. It is about cyberattacks on civilians by nation-states. IGP has recently blogged about Smith’s interesting talk and you may be interested in reading about it here

http://www.internetgovernance.org/2017/03/03/searching-for-that-neutral-digital-switzerland/

From: Ncuc-discuss [mailto:ncuc-discuss-bounces at lists.ncuc.org] On Behalf Of Ayden Férdeline
Sent: Friday, March 3, 2017 11:31 AM
To: NCUC-discuss <ncuc-discuss at lists.ncuc.org>
Subject: [NCUC-DISCUSS] Fw: [Internet Policy] New report by UN Rapporteur on Privacy

This report may be of interest to those with an interest in online privacy. Interesting to read that the UN Rapporteur does not support the notion of a 'Geneva Convention for the Internet'.

- Ayden


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [Internet Policy] New report by UN Rapporteur on Privacy
Local Time: 3 March 2017 4:25 PM
UTC Time: 3 March 2017 16:25
From: seidler at isoc.org<mailto:seidler at isoc.org>
To: internetpolicy at elists.isoc.org<mailto:internetpolicy at elists.isoc.org> <internetpolicy at elists.isoc.org<mailto:internetpolicy at elists.isoc.org>>

Hi everyone,

I would like to draw your attention to the advance release of the new report <http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Privacy/A_HRC_34_60_EN.docx> from the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy.

As part ISOC’s work on privacy, you’ll remember that we organized a community dialogue last year with the Special Rapporteur to gather input from our membership and shape his upcoming work (post-event interview available here<https://youtu.be/kMZ-IHXimSk>).

This new report, which proposes first approaches to a “more privacy-friendly oversight of government surveillance”, is to be be formally presented on 7 March at the UN Human Rights Council. We expect the report to have an important impact in the discussions related to international security and privacy.

On the premise that the status of the right to privacy in the surveillance space has not improved since his last report, the Special Rapporteur makes the following recommendations:

  *   Resist politics of fear that lead to disproportionate privacy-intrusive laws in the name of security
  *   Need for best practices in the oversight of intelligence operations
  *   Privacy needs to be respected universally, as a right of everybody, everywhere (irrespective of citizenship)
  *   Need to explore new international mechanisms for proper regulation of cross-border data requests for criminal investigation and for surveillance
The UN Rapporteur has also shared his plan for thematic reports<http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Privacy/SR/Pages/ThematicReports.aspx> until 2021, where he invites all stakeholders to reach out to him if they wish to engage in any of his initiatives.


The Internet Society believes privacy is an important right and an essential enabler of trust. As a key priority in our 2017 plans, we will have several projects this year in the policy and technical spheres aimed at better use of personal data and better privacy protections. Stay tuned.

Best regards,
Nicolas

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