This is _really_ interesting to me and I want to hear more, find out
more, and see if there are places to plug in and make a difference. I
got back from work an hour ago and my brain is mushed & I still have
more work to do tonight, so I'll mark this for future reference, but
please do keep us posted.
-G.
"Big Brother is iWatching you!"
=====
On 13-04-10-Wed 5:48 PM, Romy Ilano wrote:
I'm starting a law-related thread, there are a lot
of smart law people
here.
I'm a mobile app developer + a lot of people I know were at this
workshop today.
http://techpresident.com/news/23721/california-attorney-general-kamala-harr…
California Attorney General Kamala Harris Talks Mobile Innovation,
Privacy, and the Law
BY SARAH LAI STIRLAND <http://techpresident.com/blog/76848> |
Wednesday, April 10 2013
California Attorney General Kamala Harris on Wednesday urged mobile
software developers to explain to users how their products work as
clearly as possible so that there are no nasty surprises -- both on
the part of the end users, and the developers who may hear from her
office for privacy violations.
"Let's not stop the innovation. I don't want to shut it down," she
told a roomful of developers and businesspeople at the startup
co-working office space Runway Workspace in the South of Market area
of San Francisco. "But what we do have to do is to give the user
information, and let the user, not anyone else, make the choice about
the tradeoff."
Harris spoke at an event organized by her own office, the University
of California Hastings (her alma mater) and the Association for
Competitive Technology, an association in Washington, D.C. that
represents individual software developers who often can't afford to
hire their own in-house privacy counsel. Her remarks come as the Obama
administration itself is struggling to work with all kinds of
stakeholders on how to best protect consumers in a world where their
devices are always on, and using the attributes of personal
information and location to build their businesses.
Harris' office published a 20 page-plus booklet of checklists and
recommendations for app developers
<http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/pdfs/privacy/privacy_on_the_go.pdf>to
be mindful of when creating their products this January.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
<https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/01/california-attorney-general-releases-mobile-privacy-recommendations>,
a digital rights group, praised the recommendations, but several
advertising associations, including the American Association of
Advertising agencies, called them "unworkable."
Her office established a special privacy enforcement and protection
unit last July, staffed with some high-powered lawyers, such as Travis
LeBlanc, formerly a lawyer at the white-shoe law firms of Williams &
Connelly in Washington, D.C., and Keker & Van Nest in San Francisco.
How state attorneys general approach privacy in the digital world is
of great interest to practitioners in political technology. San
Francisco-based Organizer, for example, enables campaigns to track
their field canvassers with GPSes on their mobile phones as they knock
on doors and updates information in its voter database in real-time as
volunteers collect new data. As users do more and more from their
phones, mobile advertising has gained increasing attention from
political campaigns. And one of the biggest innovations to come from
the Obama campaign in 2012 was software that avoided potential Federal
Election Commission roadblocks against collecting mobile donations by
allowing donors to authorize, by text message or otherwise, a gift
from their credit card account already on file.
The terms of service governing these and many other applications are
breaking new legal ground, and consumers are just beginning to
understand how their data is shared, used, bought and sold --- in
politics and otherwise.
Harris is an apt character to follow in the privacy debate. She may be
the only attorney general in the country to have made privacy policies
a campaign issue when, in 2010, she accused her then-Democratic rival
Chris Kelly, Facebook's former chief privacy officer, of giving
Facebook's users' information away, a charge that Kelly's campaign denied.
"Some people might not mind giving up their contact list to get that
mobile app, because they only have four people in it, and they don't
like them anyway," Harris joked at the event. "Me, not so much. I
don't want to give up my contact list. Let the user figure out what
the benefit is before they give it up."
Harris urged developers to tell their users as much as possible about
how they use their information, and to give them 'tools' to let them
make their choices. The Association for Competitive Technology is
working on such tools, like a privacy dashboard
<http://www.bitly.com/pridash> that would tell app users, through
icons, what information is being collected.
"I am a career prosecutor. I know the great power that we have,"
Harris told the audience. "I learned at a very young age in my career
that with a swipe of my pen, I could charge someone with a
misdemeanor, the lowest level of crime possible, and by virtue of
doing that, that person would have to pick out of their pockets to
hire a lawyer. They may be arrested, they may spend a couple of hours
or days in jail, they'll be embarrassed in the context of their family
and community, probably have to miss time from work for court
appearances -- all because I charged him with a crime. It's an
incredible amount of power that we have, and we're well aware of that."
Some developers at the meeting Wednesday morning said that they
weren't aware of all of the legal requirements they had to fulfill
when building their apps, and some even suggested that Google wouldn't
have been possible as a company had all these rules on privacy been in
place at its founding, a notion that LeBlanc contested during a later
panel.
Jerome Starch, a developer who attended a NASA hackathon in March and
who is developing an app with information from NASA to get kids
interested in science, stood up after Harris left, and said her words
"terrified" him.
Morgan Reed, ACT's executive director, re-assured him, saying that
NASA uses Privo, a service that ensures app compliance with the
Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. <http://www.provo.com/>
Jonathan Nelson, another entrepreneur who spoke that morning, drew
cheers when he said, "What I really want is privacy as a service for
$5 a month."
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