Conflicting legal issues
Revision as of 12:22, 17 April 2018 by Antoniok (talk | contribs) (Antoniok moved page Privacy discussion/Legalissues to Conflicting legal issues)
- There are Conflicts
- legal and legislative
- law enforcement experience, particularly with regard to cybercrime - which has increased 300% since 2011.
- the rights to privacy are not absolute
- Other human rights
- the potential need for standards to support a “balance of human rights”.
- Legal changes
- National security requirements
- The problem of ever present sensors ( IoT etc)
- legal and legislative
- Conflicts can be avoided
- Man examples are information security problems and not in it self privacy problems.
- If we knowingly introduce backdoors into systems then we will have no security.
- There are technologies to handle this type of situations in many cases
- a subject can use lawyer, written statement, blockchain / smart contract, etc. whatever to reflect his / her will to implement the privacy rights – whether the implementation happens before or after the death
- SC27 WG5 should take a much wider look at this important issue, perhaps conducting a landscape review similar to the identity-related landscape review
- Privacy depends on strong governance and AAA (Authentication, Authorisation and Accountability) as any cyber professional will agree, which means privacy needs to be linked more closely to WG5’s authentication & IDM work. We need to consider the “How” of privacy more effectively, if we want our WG5 standards to be useful and widely adopted.