• Security + privacy = successful business

    Malcolm Crompton     |      July 19, 2011

    How you manage your online security and information is an important part of running a business. As a former Australian Privacy Commissioner I believe that while Cyber Security and privacy are different, they depend on each other.

    Security is about ensuring that you and your company have control of the information in the business and that it is neither being stolen by someone nor are you losing it. Having established control, privacy is what you do with the staff and customer information you have in the organisation.

  • Usability, User Control, Safety and Privacy – Help is at hand!

    Malcolm Crompton     |      July 8, 2011

    We have seen the incredible impact of the iPhone and iPad on the every day lives of so many of us.  Overnight, they completely reset our expectations of benchmark usability.

    As a result, many of us are collecting and sharing more information than ever before.  Including personal information.

    But what are the safety implications of this new ease and appeal?

    Like a new, fast car, are we being seduced into driving too fast?  Do these new devices have sufficient safety features and are we sufficiently well educated and experienced to drive at the new speeds available to us?

  • Privacy has made it onto the agenda of world leaders

    Malcolm Crompton     |      June 29, 2011

    It seems to have been a long time coming, but as predicted earlier in Getting closer to Base Camp: the sherpa’s are unpacking the tents, it has arrived.

    Privacy has now been placed on the agenda of the world’s leadership. It has been inching its way there for some time in forums that get very close to the leadership.

  • Getting closer to Base Camp: the sherpa’s are unpacking the tents

    Malcolm Crompton     |      May 25, 2011

    Privacy will finally be on the agenda of the next G8 meeting. In an encouraging sign G8 leaders’ ‘sherpas’ (or policy emissaries) are on the job to help them scale the issue.

    I wrote a blog in March titled Towards a Global Privacy Framework: Arriving at Base Camp.  The basis for making this statement was that, "Privacy is becoming a global leadership issue at last" because the first announcement had just come out from the CNIL that privacy would be on the agenda of the next G8 meeting for the first time.

  • Big Data: Our Future or Censor?

    Malcolm Crompton     |      May 18, 2011

    Can we gain from the enormous economic benefits of Big Data while maintaining privacy? Is it time for an ethical approach to Search and Personalisation?

    We have a choice in front of us:  Big Data is emerging as one of THE Big Issues.

    It has immense potential to provide us with economic gain, offer individuals free and made-just-for-them services, drive innovation and much, much more.

    So where is the catch?

    And yes, there is a catch or two.  Just like so many ‘too good to be true’ stories, we need to be careful that this one too doesn’t end up that way.

    Here are three evidence points.

  • Don’t Tread on My Privacy

    Malcolm Crompton     |      April 27, 2011

    One troubling implication for privacy with technological and policy development today is the unyielding belief that if somebody considers that something enhances our lives, it should be done.

    We are living in a world where our ability to remain private is rapidly diminishing.  A recent article highlights that through data analytics, corporations will be able to track our activities, habits and locations with unprecedented precision.

  • A major step forward for ID Management? NSTIC strategy released by US White House

    Malcolm Crompton     |      April 16, 2011

    In a Press Release from the White House, the US Administration has just released a much more fully developed National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace (NSTIC).  Much is promised. 

  • Towards a Global Privacy Framework: Arriving at Base Camp

    Malcolm Crompton     |      March 10, 2011

  • Transborder Accountability in Privacy Policy

    Malcolm Crompton     |      February 23, 2011

  • 2010: A Watershed Year for Privacy

    Malcolm Crompton     |      February 1, 2011

    Have all the developments and controversy in the handling of personal information during 2010 produced a long lasting sea change in the global privacy debate?

    At the risk of mixing the aquatic metaphors, in 2010 it seemed that “when it rains, it pours”.  As law makers and regulators around the world scramble to draw up their battle plans, I think it is instructive to take a look at some of the major headlines of last year and their possible influence on the debate.

    When we look back on 2010, it may prove to have been the tipping point in which privacy emerged from the peripheries of public awareness and onto the main stage.  The stories have become too prominent to ignore.  Big companies have been involved in big controversies involving very big breaches of privacy. 

    Here are some of the highlights.

  • Call centres can be too helpful

    Malcolm Crompton     |      January 17, 2011

  • Young people, social-networking, and privacy: debunking the myth

    Malcolm Crompton     |      December 20, 2010

    In the burgeoning digital social networking era, the oft-repeated assertion that “youth don’t care about privacy” has become a cliché. 

    I have always felt that this was an inaccurate representation.  It creates the false dichotomy that somehow “older” people care more or are able to better manage their privacy online.  A variation on this theme that is just as much fallacy is that “youth don’t care about privacy any more”.