Privacy Shield Data Pact Gets European Approval (bbc.com) 19
A commercial data transfer pact provisionally agreed by the EU executive and the United States in February received the green light from EU governments on Friday, the European Commission said, paving the way for it to come into effect next week. This will end months of legal limbo for companies such as Facebook, Google, and MasterCard after the EU's top court struck down the previous data transfer framework, Safe Harbour, on concerns about intrusive U.S surveillance. BBC reports: Member states of the European Commission have given "strong support" to the Privacy Shield said the EC's Justice Commissioner Vera Jourova in a statement. Ms Jourova said the approval paved the way for the formal adoption of the agreement early next week. "The EU-US Privacy Shield will ensure a high level of protection for individuals and legal certainty for business," said Commissioner Jourova. "It is fundamentally different from the old Safe Harbour." The adoption of the Privacy Shield ends months of uncertainty for many tech companies such as Google and Facebook after the European court found the Safe Harbour agreement wanting. The agreement covers everything from personal information about employees to the detailed records of what people do online, which is often used to aid targeted advertising. The Safe Harbour pact let US companies skirt tough European rules that govern how this data can be treated, by letting them generate their own reports about the steps they took to stop it being misused.Ars Technica's report further explains the matter.
Nice name (Score:1)
too bad these things invariably mean the European people end up with less privacy than they'd had before "data sharing" or whatever the euphemism is this week.
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Since this is the EU we're talking, you can rest assured it doesn't just come with bacon but with a few barrels of pork.
coming up soon... (Score:3)
After the "Safe Harbor" and the "Privacy Shield", why not go for some spicier names for the next few rounds of this?
"Data Chastity Belt"
"Information Condom"
"The Internet Dildo"
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Re:So is it good or bad for privacy? (Score:4, Informative)
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The trouble is that the fundamental paradox still exists.
On the one hand, European privacy standards are stronger than the US. In particular, there is no magic exemption in the European privacy rules where the US government should be allowed to arbitrarily spy on European citizens if their data is exported to or via a company with assets in the US. Clearly the US government disagrees with this principle and wants access to everything, and it is well established that the US government does in fact take measu
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Nope, because then you violate the European rules about collecting and sharing personal data. You aren't allowed to just put riders in some contract or terms somewhere saying you can collect whatever you want and use it for whatever you want and then claim the user gave their consent or something.
In practice it's rarely enforced because there aren't the resources to go after every little business that doesn't fully comply, and no-one has much interest in doing so anyway as long as they're following the spir
Cue the next law suit (Score:2)
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Actually it comes off as a bit of a trap. It seems to be written to be broken, the exposed as bring broken and then far stricter rules being justified. It's like they fully expect the US government to break those rules in it's grab for total power and control and so the new shield is designed to fail. Stricter and stricter privacy rules as slowly but surely coming into being and corrupt government agencies and equally corrupt corporations are fighting them to the bitter end. It seems to have become a regul