Public Knowledge Releases Paper Recommending Guiding Principles for Online Privacy Laws
Public Knowledge Releases Paper Recommending Guiding Principles for Online Privacy Laws
Public Knowledge Releases Paper Recommending Guiding Principles for Online Privacy Laws

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    Today, Public Knowledge launched a new white paper, “Principles for Privacy Legislation: Putting People Back in Control of Their Information,” by Senior Vice President Harold Feld.

    The paper recommends four guiding principles for Congress to consider before crafting any online privacy legislation in order to create the strongest protections for consumers.

    1. Americans deserve the right to own and control their personal information;
    2. The context in which people share their personal information matters, and where individuals must provide their personal information to receive essential services — for example, to generate a credit report necessary for nearly any major purchase — that law should reflect the reality that the consumer has little choice by imposing a greater obligation to protect the information;
    3. Americans need more privacy protection, not more privacy preemption. Federal law should recognize the vital role state privacy protections play rather than preempt them; and,
    4. New privacy laws should be “backward compatible” with existing federal privacy law, rather than eliminate existing federal protections.

    The paper traces the evolution of modern American privacy law from Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis’ seminal article, “The Right of Privacy,” to the existing enforcement regime by the Federal Trade Commission. The paper argues that as the digital age has progressed, the personal right of property has steadily eroded from a right to control one’s personal information to the modern framework which makes any control over one’s personal information dependent on privacy policies entirely controlled by companies collecting this information.

    This steady erosion of personal control was not the result of deliberate policy, but from the failure of Congress to provide the Federal Trade Commission with the necessary authority to protect consumers in the digital age. The four principles that should guide privacy legislation going forward, properly implemented, will gradually correct this erosion of the personal right of privacy and put people back in control of their personal information.

    The following can be attributed to Harold Feld, Senior Vice President at Public Knowledge:

    “More than 100 years ago, Justice Brandeis described the ‘fundamental right to be let alone’ as essential as the right to own property or enjoy liberty. Today, the average American cannot even determine who has collected their personal information, or for what purposes. It is past time for federal privacy law to return to the proud tradition of American law that puts consumers first.”

    You may view the paper here.

    Members of the media may contact Communications Director Shiva Stella with inquiries, interview requests, or to join the Public Knowledge press list at shiva@publicknowledge.org or 405-249-9435.