Login, change your address, subscribe to new or manage current magazines or e-newsletter subscriptions
Computerworld Publication PageNetworkWorld Publication PageCIO Canada Publication PageITJobUniverse.ca
- The Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) Job Board
Advanced Search
Knowledge Centres
Content Types
Featured White Papers
Gartner Research Note "Boost SharePoint Performance with an Application Delivery Network"Gartner Research Note "Boost SharePoint Performance with an Application Delivery Network" read more
From fear to value: CIO strategies for propelling business through the economic crisisFrom fear to value: CIO strategies for propelling business through the economic crisis read more
Reaping the rewards of your service-oriented architecture infrastructureReaping the rewards of your service-oriented architecture infrastructure read more
Yuk it Up
Featured White Paper
Ensuring that IT security is delivering true value to the organization requires approaching security through a business lens, with the ability to span operational silos and IT domains to secure your critical business processes across the organization. Read on to learn how to help mitigate enterprise security risks by leveraging IBM solutions to drive business innovation and success, while reducing complexity and costs along the way.
IT World Canada Blogs
Keep up with breaking news on worms, trojans, spam and other threats to your corporate network and hear about the best practices in risk management from some of Canada's leading experts.
Salary Calculator 2009
Check out Computerworld Canada's 2009 Salary Calculator. Access up-to-date information from our 2009 IT Salary Survey, including salaries, cash bonuses, and percentage increases over 2008.
Featured Spotlight
Keep up on who's hiring, who's downsizing and how the government is helping. News, job opportunities, recruiters and employment lawyers are all available.
Sign-Up for
Security
eNewsletter Delivered Weekly
Click here
Page 1 of 1

Digg it Twitter

Google calls for global online privacy standard

Search giant Google Inc. will propose on Friday that governments and technology companies create a transnational privacy policy to address growing concerns over how personal data is handled across the Internet.

Google's global privacy counsel, Peter Fleischer, will make the proposal at a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization meeting in Strasbourg, France, dealing with the intersection of technology with human rights and ethics.

Fleischer's 30-minute presentation will advocate that regulators, international organizations and private companies increase dialog on privacy issues with a goal to create a unified standard.

Google envisions the policy to be a product of self-regulation by companies, improved laws and possible new ones, according to a Google spokesman based in London.

"We don’t want to be prescriptive about who does that and what those standards are because it should be a collaborative effort," the spokesman said.

Other organizations have already made progress on privacy standards, he said. For example, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) created a nine-point Privacy Framework designed to aid countries without existing policies.

However, the framework has been criticized for vagueness and only been partially implemented by APEC members, said David Bradshaw, principal analyst at Ovum PLC.

European Union (E.U.) privacy regulations are already more stringent than the APEC's recommendations, which highlights the difficulty in creating a global standard that meets existing regulatory requirements in various geographic areas, he said.

"From Google's viewpoint, they can't expect the E.U. and those nations that have higher privacy standards to level down to the APEC standards," Bradshaw said.

Google's increasing power in search, Internet commerce and software services has placed its privacy policies under scrutiny.

In June, Google Inc. said it would delete the data it stores about end users anonymously in its server logs after 18 months, part of an effort to deflate concerns about privacy raised by a E.U. working group composed of data protection officials from 27 countries.

Google took a further battering after it acquired DoubleClick Inc., an online advertising company that uses technology to track user trends in order to serve them targeted ads. The technology, also used by many other Internet advertising companies, has raised privacy concerns.

A European consumer group, Bureau Européen des Unions de Consommateurs asked the European Commission in July as well as other authorities to investigate how the DoubleClick deal would impact consumers.

The focus on privacy by governments and individual Internet users has resulted in localized legislation, causing a fragmentation in privacy regulations, Google's spokesman said.

That can make it difficult for e-commerce businesses, as an increasing amount of data is routinely crossing international borders through credit card transactions, he said.

"We really hope that this sparks a sustained, thoughtful creative debate, he said.

Page 1 of 1
Send to a Friend  Rate This Page  Print This PageAdd a new comment
Bookmark this article on:
del.icio.us| Digg it| Furl| Google| Technorati| StumbleIt| Yahoo!

Have something to say about this article? Add a new comment

If you find a comment inappropriate, You can notify the moderator by clicking the Report an innapropriate comment icon.
ADD A COMMENT
Name:*Your email address will not appear online and will be used only in the event that the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comment.
City:
Email:
Title:*
Comment:*
* required fields



Related Content
Articles

White Papers
Improving business through smart energy and environment policy
Businesses and public entities today face increasing pressure to develop policies that are both good for the planet and good for business. A framework developed by IBM offers businesses and other organizations a comprehensive approach to energy and environmental issues. The framework helps identify and prioritize environmental efforts by breaking down problems and opportunities into seven distinct business areas, which can then be segmented into manageable projects.