Showing results for v2024 oncept promised cambodia
Just_Click_Submit_ The_Collection,_Dissemination_and_Tagging_of
[…] a way to stop such sharing. 5. P RIVACY POLICY AMENDMENTS In all, 92% of the Top 25 discussed amendments to th eir privacy policies. Five companies promised that amendments would not take the place of past po licies under which customers submitted PII – i.e., amendments are not binding on past customers. Four […]
Identities Evolve Why Federated Identity is Easier Said Than Done
[…] identity: An unproven orthodoxy The past decade is littered with earnest identity ini tiatives that failed to get off the ground and security industry consortia that over- promised and under-delivered. We’ve endured endless deconstructions of “trust” and theoretical diss ertations on “identity” but none of this work has led to the sort of breakthrough […]
Global_Digital_Infrastructure_Policy_Merged
Sponsoring Trust in Tomorrow’s Technology: Towards a Global Digital Infrastructure Policy By John Miller and David Hoffman The information contained in this document represents the current view of Intel Corporation on the issues discussed as of the date of publication. This document is for informational purposes only. INTEL MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, […]
First_Generation_Laws
1 PRIVACY INVASIVE GEO -MASHUPS: PRIVACY 2.0 AND THE LIMITS OF FIRST GENERATION INFORMATI ON PRIVACY LAWS Mark Burdon † ABSTRACT Online technological advances are pioneering the wider distribution of geospatial information for general mapping purposes. The use of popular web – based applications, such as Google Maps, is ensuring that mapping based applications are […]
E-Commerce_and_Information_Privacy_ Privacy_Policies_as_Personal
Corey A. Ciocchetti n r r 55 American Business Law Journal n Id. F F See, e.g Personal Information in Government Records: Protecting the Public Interest In Privacy 63, 118 & n.332 (2006) (defining personally identifying information with reference to the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C.552a(a)(4) (2000)); TRUSTe,Guidance on Model Web Site Disclosures, http://www.truste.org/docs/Model_Privacy_ […]
Dispelling the Myths Surrounding De-identification Anonymization Remains a Strong Tool for Protecting Privacy
Dispelling the Myths Surrounding De-identification: Anonymization Remains a Strong Tool for Protecting Privacy Ann Cavoukian, Ph.D. Information & Privacy Commissioner, Ontario, Canada June 2011 Khaled El Emam, Ph.D. Canada Research Chair in Electronic Health Information, CHEO Research Institute and University of Ottawa Table of Contents Introduction ……………………………………………………………… ………. 1 Questioning the Value of De-identification ………………………………. […]
Cookies_Constitution_and_Common-Law_2
DRAFT – PUBLISHED IN WINTER 2002 -2003 1 Cookies, The Constitution, and The Common Law: A Framework for the Right of Privacy on The Internet M ATTHEW C. KECK * That the individual shall have the full protection in person and in property is a principle as old as the common law; but it has […]
Chinas_Pragmatic_Privacy_Law_beyond_APEC
[…] more desire for their personal space and privacy. 6 In his analysis of Chinese legal writings of the 19 80s and early1990s on privacy and legislative privacy protections, Guobin Zhu 7 contends the scholarly works lacked an understanding of how to distinguish between the ter ms shameful secret and privacy. Zhu presents a clarification of the two terms—”sham eful secret” and “privacy” and suggests a reason for lack of conceptualization of privacy by many people in China through the 1980s. As Zhu explains, the two words—s hameful secret (yinsi) and privacy ( yinsi )— were frequently used interchangeably, as they were close in pronunciation except 4 Bonnie S. McDougall, “Is There a Chinese Sense of Privacy?” IIAS Newsletter Online, 26, May 31-June 2, 2001. Available at http://www.iias.nl/ii asn/26/regions/26EA8.html. 5 Yaoji Jin (金燿基), “Chinese Understanding of Privacy Right—Chinese C oncept of Public, Private,” ( 中國人對隱私權的理解——中國人的”公””私”觀念) Ming Bao Monthly Publication (明報月刊) (February 1994): 56-62. 6 Yunxiang Yan, Private Life under Socialism: Love, Intimacy, and F amily Change in a Chinese Village 1949-1999 (Stanford: Stanford University Press). Yan’s name is written with the last name last instead of the traditional last name firs t to reflect the format Yan uses in the publication and the citation format. If a publication uses the last name first, I will maintain the traditional format in the manuscript and use the first name/las t name format in the citation. 7 Guobin Zhu, The Right to Privacy: An Emerging Righ t in Chinese Law,” Statute Law Review 18 (2007): 208-209. 4 […]
China’s_Pragmatic_Privacy_Law_beyond_APEC_
[…] more desire for their personal space and privacy. 6 In his analysis of Chinese legal writings of the 19 80s and early1990s on privacy and legislative privacy protections, Guobin Zhu 7 contends the scholarly works lacked an understanding of how to distinguish between the ter ms shameful secret and privacy. Zhu presents a clarification of the two terms—”sham eful secret” and “privacy” and suggests a reason for lack of conceptualization of privacy by many people in China through the 1980s. As Zhu explains, the two words—s hameful secret (yinsi) and privacy ( yinsi )— were frequently used interchangeably, as they were close in pronunciation except 4 Bonnie S. McDougall, “Is There a Chinese Sense of Privacy?” IIAS Newsletter Online, 26, May 31-June 2, 2001. Available at http://www.iias.nl/ii asn/26/regions/26EA8.html. 5 Yaoji Jin (金燿基), “Chinese Understanding of Privacy Right—Chinese C oncept of Public, Private,” ( 中國人對隱私權的理解——中國人的”公””私”觀念) Ming Bao Monthly Publication (明報月刊) (February 1994): 56-62. 6 Yunxiang Yan, Private Life under Socialism: Love, Intimacy, and F amily Change in a Chinese Village 1949-1999 (Stanford: Stanford University Press). Yan’s name is written with the last name last instead of the traditional last name firs t to reflect the format Yan uses in the publication and the citation format. If a publication uses the last name first, I will maintain the traditional format in the manuscript and use the first name/las t name format in the citation. 7 Guobin Zhu, The Right to Privacy: An Emerging Righ t in Chinese Law,” Statute Law Review 18 (2007): 208-209. 4 […]
Chattering Laptops
Chattering Laptops Tuomas Aura 1 , Janne Lindqvist 2 , Michael Roe 1 , Anish Mohammed 3 1 Microsoft Research, Cambridge, UK 2 Helsinki University of Technology, Finland 3 Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Abstract. Mobile computer users often have a false sense of anonymity when they connect to the Internet at cafes, hotels, […]