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Dead Constitution
See other Dead Constitution Articles

Title: Leading surveillance societies in the EU and the World 2007
Source: Privacy International
URL Source: http://www.privacyinternational.org ... html?cmd%5b347%5d=x-347-559597
Published: Dec 28, 2007
Author: n/a
Post Date: 2007-12-31 18:43:01 by Split
Keywords: Police State, Intrusion, Domestic Spying
Views: 14

The 2007 International Privacy Ranking

State of Privacy Map

Map of Privacy Protections 2007

Table of findings

Worst countries in each category

The findings are available in PDF format by clicking here.

Contents

Overview

Each year since 1997, the US-based Electronic Privacy Information Center and the UK-based Privacy International have undertaken what has now become the most comprehensive survey of global privacy ever published. The Privacy & Human Rights Report surveys developments in 70 countries, assessing the state of surveillance and privacy protection.

The most recent report published in 2007, available at http://www.privacyinternational.org/phr, is probably the most comprehensive single volume report published in the human rights field. The report runs over 1,100 pages and includes 6,000 footnotes. More than 200 experts from around the world have provided materials and commentary. The participants range from eminent privacy scholars to high-level officials charged with safeguarding constitutional freedoms in their countries. Academics, human rights advocates, journalists and researchers provided reports, insight, documents and advice. In 2006 Privacy International took the decision to use this annual report as the basis for a ranking assessment of the state of privacy in all EU countries together with eleven non-EU benchmark countries. Funding for the project was provided by the Open Society Institute (OSI) and the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust. Follow this link for more details of last year's results.

The new 2007 global rankings extend the survey to 47 countries (from the original 37) and, for the first time, provide an opportunity to assess trends.

The intention behind this project is two-fold. First, we hope to recognize countries in which privacy protection and respect for privacy is nurtured. This is done in the hope that others can learn from their example. Second we intend to identify countries in which governments and privacy regulators have failed to create a healthy privacy environment. The aim is not to humiliate the worst ranking nations, but to demonstrate that it is possible to maintain a healthy respect for privacy within a secure and fully functional democracy.

Important note

This study and the accompanying ranking chart measure the extent of surveillance and privacy. They do not intend to comprehensively reflect the state of democracy or the full extent of legal or parliamentary health or dysfunction in these countries (though the two conditions are frequently linked). The aim of this study is to present an assessment of the extent of information disclosure, surveillance, data exploitation and the general state of information privacy.

Summary of key findings

(Please note that "worst ranking" and "lowest ranking" denotes countries that exhibit poor privacy performance and high levels of surveillance.

About Privacy International

Privacy International (PI) is a human rights organization that was formed in 1990 both as a watchdog on technology and information policy trends and as a monitoring group to track surveillance and privacy invasion by governments and corporations. PI was the first global non-government privacy organization, and has been instrumental in establishing the international privacy movement. It has conducted campaigns and research throughout the world on issues ranging from wiretapping and national security, to ID cards, video surveillance, data matching, medical privacy, and freedom of information and expression.

PI's skills and expertise have been used by law reform and human rights organisations in more than fifty countries to assist local issues and by numerous international groups to provide input to global policy issue. PI has worked with more than 200 partner organizations.

Background

In recent years, Parliaments throughout the world have enacted legislation intended to comprehensively increase government's reach into the private life of nearly all citizens and residents. Competing "public interest" claims on the grounds of security, law enforcement, the fight against terrorism and illegal immigration, administrative efficiency and welfare fraud have rendered the fundamental right of privacy fragile and exposed. The extent of surveillance over the lives of many people has ow reached an unprecedented level. Conversely, laws that ostensibly protect privacy and freedoms are frequently flawed – riddled with exceptions and exceptions that can allow government a free hand to intrude on private life.

At the same time, technological advances, technology standards, interoperability between information systems and the globalisation of information have placed extraordinary pressure on the few remaining privacy safeguards. The effect of these developments has been to create surveillance societies that nurture hostile environments for privacy.

Governments have created hundreds of key policy initiatives that, combined, may fundamentally destabilize core elements of personal privacy. Among these are proposals for the creation across society of "perfect" identity using fingerprint and iris scanning biometrics the linkage of public sector computer systems, the development of real-time tracking and monitoring throughout the communications spectrum, the development of real-time geographic vehicle and mobile phone tracing, national DNA databases, the creation of global information sharing agreements and the elimination of anonymity in cyberspace.

The potential for engagement of these developments is currently limited to a marginal response. The problem for civil society – or indeed anyone wishing to challenge surveillance - is not simply the sheer magnitude of the threat, but also its complexity and diversity.

It is important for each country to decide rationally and openly which element of personal privacy should be lost, but it is also important for each country to understand how far down the path of mass surveillance it has travelled. It is for this reason that we have undertaken the rankings project.

The ranking assess the key areas of surveillance and control, and will identify mechanisms of protection that have failed to operate according to the letter and spirit of the national and international privacy protections. It will concentrate on policy development issues, inadequacies in the consultation process, legal protections (or lack of them), the impact of surveillance on democratic institutions, changes to the nature of society and the implications for individual freedoms and autonomy.

Methodology

Changes from 2006

Weightings

Methodology

Grading

Countries have been graded according to a mean score across fourteen criteria. These are divided into
Score rangeDescription

4.1-5.0

Consistently upholds human right standards

3.6-4.0

Significant protections and safeguards

3.1-3.5

Adequate safeguards against abuse

2.6-3.0

Some safeguards but weakened protections

2.1-2.5

Systemic failure to uphold safeguards

1.6-2.0

Extensive surveillance societies

1.1-1.5

Endemic surveillance societies

Criteria

Constitutional protection

Statutory protection

Privacy enforcement

Identity cards and biometrics

Data-sharing

Visual surveillance

Communication interception

Workplace monitoring

Government access to data

Communications data retention

Surveillance of medical, financial and movement

Border and trans-border issues

Leadership

Democratic safeguards

Rationale for 2007 rankings: key aspects per country

(links take you to the country reports from Privacy and Human Rights 2006 for additional information)

AUSTRIA

BELGIUM

BULGARIA

CYPRUS

CZECH REPUBLIC

DENMARK

ESTONIA

EUROPEAN UNION

FINLAND

FRANCE

GERMANY

GREECE

HUNGARY

IRELAND

ITALY

LATVIA

LITHUANIA

LUXEMBOURG

MALTA

NETHERLANDS

POLAND

PORTUGAL

ROMANIA

SLOVENIA

SLOVAKIA

SPAIN

SWEDEN

UNITED KINGDOM

England & Wales

Scotland

NON-EU COUNTRIES

ARGENTINA

AUSTRALIA

BRAZIL

CANADA

CHINA

ICELAND

INDIA

ISRAEL

JAPAN

MALAYSIA

NEW ZEALAND

NORWAY

PHILIPPINES

RUSSIA

SINGAPORE

SWITZERLAND

SOUTH AFRICA

TAIWAN

THAILAND

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


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