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Privacy Australia The Internet

Australian Federal Government Adopts 'Nuanced' Position On Data-Sharing Consent (zdnet.com) 29

BoogieChile writes: "Nuanced" in this case meaning: they don't need it. A discussion paper on Australia's Data Sharing and Release Legislative Reforms "tweaks" proposed new Data Sharing and Release legislation by removing the requirement for people to consent to the sharing of personal information. "Instead, we are placing the responsibility on Data Custodians and Accredited Users to safely and respectfully share personal information where reasonably required for a legitimate objective," it says.

The paper says that following feedback, the government has "nuanced" its position on consent. "While consent is important in certain situations, the societal outcomes of fair and unbiased government policy, research, and programs can outweigh the benefits of consent, provided privacy is protected," it says. "The Office of the National Data Commissioner will encourage the use of consent where appropriate when applying the Data Sharing Principles, although the legislation will not require it in all circumstances."
According to the government, requiring consent for all data sharing will lead to biased data that delivers the wrong outcomes.

"The Data Sharing and Release legislation is about improving government policy and research by helping government and researchers use a better evidence base. If we required consent, then data would only be shared where consent was given," the paper says. "This will skew the data which is shared, leaving it unfit for many important purposes in the public benefit; it also runs the risk of leading to flawed policy and research which impacts negatively on society."
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Australian Federal Government Adopts 'Nuanced' Position On Data-Sharing Consent

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  • Argh (Score:4, Funny)

    by scdeimos ( 632778 ) on Thursday September 05, 2019 @05:19AM (#59160862)
    Note that this discussion paper is about sharing government-collected data, such as ABS Census data, with third parties.

    According to the government, requiring consent for all data sharing will lead to biased data that delivers the wrong outcomes.

    Fine, let's share all the ministers' and senators' private address and phone number info with the internet and see how they feel about dem outcomes.

    • by lkcl ( 517947 )

      "The paper says that following feedback,"

      ... from whom?

      • Presumably from their customers.

        "Wrong outcomes" could be anything from misallocation of tax monies and inadequate disaster planning, to ineffective advertisements/junk mail.
      • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
        The Australian process is that there's a period where they accept submissions from anyone. When it comes to regular members of the public, if you're really lucky, then it will fall on deaf ears (or blind eyes... for that matter). I get the feeling that most submissions from regular people are just ignored, as these processes are only there to offer the perception of transparency, it ultimately comes down to what the elites want.
        • by Kjella ( 173770 )

          Well almost all such hearings are in response to a political initiative, so they consider themselves the representatives of the general public. What they're really gouging is the level of buy-in they have among experts and special interest groups and whether the legislation is poorly written and has unintended interpretations or side effects. Like if it's about civil rights they might care what the ACLU, EFF and bar association thinks but not every wannabe supreme court justice. It's very unlikely they'll r

          • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
            These hearings aren't part of a political initiative in Australia (there are separate hearings for that), it's part of the process when they draft new proposals for law. I don't think every new law goes through this process, but some which are far reaching and usually have an effect on everyone, usually do go through this process.
      • Whoever had money to pay the government.

    • Doxxing everyone responsible for this decision is in fact the responsible and moral way to combat it. They have sent a clear signal that it is acceptable behavior.

  • I mentioned this in various submissions to government on various acts for several years. It's kind of spooky to see them taking my advice. As this is government mandating specific standards for handling data I gisted that there is also an accreditation scheme for data handlers.

    Here is the mailing list for making submissions about the function of the commission:
    www.datacommissioner.gov.au/contact

    This could be really good or really bad. Thanks editor for making it easy to get to details on the prop

  • by tietokone-olmi ( 26595 ) on Thursday September 05, 2019 @06:45AM (#59161022)

    Meanwhile others normalize the consent effect out. Clearly 'straya is making its laws with an eye toward selling this data to commercial interests.

    • Well, of course they have the utmost respect for anything that they can get revenue from. And increasing revenue is certainly a legitimate goal. There; contradictions resolved. Give us your data, and we'll flog it around to anyone we want, because we benefit from doing it.
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Thursday September 05, 2019 @07:27AM (#59161094)

    We don't give a flying fuck!

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday September 05, 2019 @07:40AM (#59161134) Homepage Journal

    In linguistics, an expletive is a word whose semantic function is to convey the attitude toward something rather than any definite meaning.

    Used as an adjective, "nuanced" means "subtle, complex". There's nothing subtle or complex here, they're taking a quite straightforward stance toward mandatory user consent: no. Used as an explective, "nuanced" here means that their decision involves things too complicated for the public to understand and the public should just trust that they've done a good job.

  • Instead, we are placing the responsibility on Data Custodians and Accredited Users to safely and respectfully share personal information where reasonably required for a legitimate objective

    Where "safely and respectfully" means "makes us a metric crap-ton of money".

  • If you don't want your data being shared don't put it on the fucking internet.
    I mean holy shit, if you don't realize that the internet is the #1 tool for data sharing that currently exists, that it was invented explicitly for sharing data, then what in all hell do you think the internet is?

    STOP PUTTING PERSONAL INFO ONLINE, YOU DUMB ZOOMERS

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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