It’s been a long time coming, but last week saw the publication of RFC 6462, the Report from the Internet Privacy Workshop. The workshop, which was jointly hosted by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
and others in December 2010, brought together experts from industry and
the Internet standards community to better understand the role of
privacy in Internet standardization work.
The workshop report
provides a useful overview of fundamental privacy design challenges that
appear again and again: the increasing ease of user/device/application
fingerprinting, unforeseen information leakage, difficulties in
distinguishing first parties from third parties, complications arising
from system dependencies, and the lack of transparency and user
awareness of privacy risks and tradeoffs. The report also identifies a
number of barriers to successful deployment and analysis of
privacy-minded protocols and systems, including the difficulty of using
generic protocols and tools to defend against context-specific threats;
the tension between privacy protection and usability; and the difficulty
of navigating between business, legal, and individual incentives.
The IAB has been leading an effort within the Internet standards community to better conceptualize how privacy is addressed within Internet standards development. By exploring privacy challenges as they exist on the Internet today, the workshop report provides a foundation for this and other efforts to build on.
For tech policy updates, follow us on Twitter at @CenDemTech.
www.cdt.org
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario