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Data Retention And Privacy

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Friday February 21, 2003 12:17author by scared Report this post to the editors

Mc Dowell Sneaks Behind The Backs Of The Entire Nation

As someone who works in the internet industry, this is something that scares the hell out of me - but it should scare the hell out of EVERYONE. The Minister for Justice, and as a result, the government, are planning legislation to store and retain all telecommunications data for THREE YEARS! There are NO INDUSTRY MEMBERS BEING CONSULTED that I can see, the Data Protection Commissioner seems to have been EXCLUDED FROM ANY CONSULTATION, basically, even the US and the UK have disagreed with what McDowell is proposing. NO CROSS PARTY PARLIAMENTARY GROUP are involved in this, no nothing. This isn't Big Brother, this is out and out Stalinist era totalitarian state control. Not even the Department of Homeland Security in the US is this scary. THIS GROSS INVASION OF PRIVACY NEEDS TO BE FOUGHT NOW BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.

The following was written by Karlin Lillington, a freelance journalist with the Irish Times. I would write my own version of the article as opposed to feeding stuff in here verbatim, but she writes it well, and she's a passionate campaigner on this, and I also know her a little bit.

For the "first phase" of a consultation process on its proposed data retention Bill - an oppressive proposal that would see the mandatory retention of all your phone, mobile, internet, fax and email traffic information for three years - the Department has designed an agenda that has nothing particularly public, nor consultative, about it.

According to the Minister for Justice, Mr McDowell, the data needs to be retained for possible criminal investigations. But such data may already be retained for a reasonable six months, and with a warrant,for longer.

The Government is also now severely out of synch with the stance on data retention taken by its neighbours, Britain and the United States. In Britain, a cross-party parliamentary group studying the issue roundly rejected data retention last month after months of consultations, concluding that it was costly and unworkable, would cause many businesses to move to other countries, placed personal information at risk, and contravened established privacy rights.

On the US side, despite heightened fears of terrorism, both Congress and the Senate this month voted to gut and pull funding from the FBI's proposed total information awareness (TIA) programme, which would have pooled digital information from a wide variety of sources to produce dossiers on every American.

A particularly offensive part of the proposal, according to comments by the lawmakers who opposed it, was the notion of retaining the same kind of traffic data envisioned for the Irish Bill - though even then, it would not have been on such a wide scale as Mr McDowell is promoting.

More ominously, US legislators only rejected the use of TIA on Americans. Vast permanent databases of information on Irish and other foreign citizens would no doubt be attractive to US law enforcement - the exact groups which pushed the EU hard to dissolve long-standing data protection policies and introduce long-term data retention schemes they dare not impose on their own citizens. Our gutless MEPs bought the argument - and here we are.

But back to the Department's proposed consultative process - a clear afterthought to secretive moves by the Department to bring in such a Bill. The time for consultations was surely as the Bill was being drafted. However, the Department already has its preliminary draft, written long ago over the summer.

But neither the industries that will bear the brunt of retention, storage and management costs for such a proposal, nor the State's privacy rights, internet or citizens' groups, were consulted before the draft was written.

Indeed, a leaked confidential memo revealed that the Department told the EU Council of Ministers it felt it had no need to consult with the industries involved because it knew they would be co-operative. This assumption came as a surprise to affected industry groups such as the Irish Internet Service Providers Association.

Then two weeks ago, the Department revealed what it is calling the "first" element of a consultation process, a three-hour event this Monday in Dublin that has not been publicly announced. Invitations and a draft agenda went out to a closed list of organisations (many of which have since been trying to figure out who else has been invited).

The event has little that is consultative about it. According to the draft agenda, the speakers include the Minister, talking for 20 minutes (who, of course, supports the Bill). Then, the Department of Communications gets all of 10 minutes to discuss Directive 97/66/EC and "the processing of personal data and the protection of privacy in the telecommunications sector and amending Directives, and technical aspects of data retention." Whew - in 10 minutes?

Then, believe it or not, the audience will be treated to a 20-minute presentation by An Garda Síochána on - wait for it - "the contribution of data retention in the fight against crime".

Excuse me, but isn't this a little like having a public consultation on the military use of Shannon Airport at which the only speakers are the Irish and American governments? Shouldn't the Department be gathering and listening to viewpoints, rather than expressing them? Many invitees took one look at that agenda and were taken aback that the official guardian of privacy rights, the Data Protection Commissioner, Mr Joe Meade, wasn't on the list. They also wondered why an industry representative wasn't speaking.

So I called Mr Meade. Surprised that he wasn't on the draft agenda sent to all the invitees, he says he will indeed be speaking. So I called the Department. Apparently, the agenda still hasn't been finalised.

If Mr Meade was always on the speakers list, the Department made a gross error in leaving him off the draft agenda - an exclusion that has already lost it credibility and done it serious damage in the minds of many attendees. Also, as far as I can ascertain, no one from industry has been asked to offer a perspective. It really doesn't matter if there are intentions to ask for such views. The Department has set out its stall, and can hardly be considered impartial.

At stake is the greatest mass compromising of personal privacy ever proposed in this State. The Department that is proposing to limit long-accepted personal freedoms and privacy rights must not be allowed to conduct afterthought consultations when its own bias is already so clearly displayed. If the Dáil lacks the backbone its British and American counterparts have shown in crushing such proposals, it must at least place an independent, multi-party Dáil committee in charge of the consultative process.

author by I spypublication date Sat Mar 03, 2007 12:59author address author phone Report this post to the editors



The TDR did pass through the Oireachtas.
There is a three year retention period- mobile phone, internet.
Mac D is fighting the EU post 11/9 TDR, of 2 1/2 years.
The Information Commisssioner threatened to Sue MacD over the TDR which remained unlegislated for a long period.

The original Three year Data Retention period was introduced as part of a communication
directive introduced @ cabinet by Minister Mary O Rourke as part of a communications
directive.

On Tuesday of next week the dail will debate emergency legislation but FF are not
getting off that lightly.....
This add on is a bit of spring-cleaning.

Legislations dated 2002-2006 were part of a co-operation between
both parts of the present State.

MacD does not respect the democratic rights of irish people to privacy.
Bertie and mary O Rourke ensured that all data was retained without
legislations under the Communications directive.
google DRI- Digital Rights Ireland.

author by I Mac Dpublication date Fri Apr 02, 2004 16:38author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Who know's who now Michael?

author by Bluebonnetpublication date Sat Feb 22, 2003 11:14author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Karlin Lillington's articles about privacy issues and data storage are excellent and frightening. I recommend reading her articles published in the Irish Times on:

28/11/2002
29/11/2002
31/12/2002

Also, read her IT article of 7 February, 2003 'Terrorism no excuse for taking away right to privacy'. She interviews George Radwanski, Privacy Commissioner of Canada and champion of individual privacy rights. His viewpoints provide sane arguments against the invasion of privacy electronically (including the use of those nifty new technologies like retinal scanners). His opinions can also be found at:

www.privcom.gc.ca/information/ar/02_04_10_e.asp#overview.

The Total Information Awareness (TIA) program has been halted in the USA for now thanks to so many citizens and organizations that raised hell with our elected representatives. Unfortunately, I expect some Pentagon anti-privacy nazi will be pushing for something again soon and we'll have to start round two. Of course, the TIA program probably got truly squashed because the senators and representatives didn't want their own digital dossiers on file.

One day I expect some official snoop will assume that my rental of a helium canister to blow up (oops, I should say inflate) party balloons will mean I've got something nefarious planned when the biggest mischief we can think of will be to take a few breaths of the stuff and start talking like Mickey Mouse.

Don't be afraid, it paralyzes you. Action dispels fear!
BB

author by scaredpublication date Sat Feb 22, 2003 04:10author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Will it be stored up for three years?

If no one opposes it, why not? What we need to do here is to pressure politicians, write them letters, write to newspapers, let McDowell know we're listening and demand a public consultation.

Otherwise...well, don't feel too comfortable about using a telecoms device for anything more than the most basic of information because your Big Brother Michael will be be watching in case you say something he doesn't agree with :-(

author by Gar Shanleypublication date Fri Feb 21, 2003 18:35author email gar at dublin dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Michael McDowell is a sad little man who has harboured pitiful dellusions of fascistic grandure. These dellusions find their origins in his childhood experiences of being roughly handled by unkempt youths in the schoolyard. (When his Mother came along to stick up for him it only made things worse)

He used to debate in UCD wearing his F.C.A. uniform and had all the little buttons shined up lovely.

He has a rubber dinghy that he sits in at home whilst eating sandwiches and listening to the 1812 Overture.

He reads books about Franco and fiddles with himself when he gets to the really draconian parts.

Even the free Masons wouldn't have him so he's still a member of The Warlord Comic Secret Society.

Sorry, had to get that out of my system. Will it be stored up for three years do you think, or have I been a bit premature?

 
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