Is Europe shifting its privacy
stance?
by Swartz, Nikki
In 2009, the European Union's (EU) Data Retention Directive
will go into effect. But a few EU nations are already announcing their
interpretations of the mandate, which requires phone and Internet
companies to retain the names and addresses of subscribers for a period
of between six to 24 months, to be determined by individual nations.
This law was encouraged by law enforcement officials who, after
terrorist attacks in Britain and Spain, argued for better and longer
data storage from European communications companies to aid in
investigating possible terrorists.
A few early interpretations by Germany and the Netherlands have led
some to ask whether there will soon be a policy shift in Europe, which
has long been a staunch defender of individuals' privacy rights.
Some European governments are preparing laws that will require
companies to keep information about individuals' Internet and phone
use that goes beyond what the countries will be required to do under the
EU directive, according to a New York Times report.
For example, a proposal from the German Ministry of Justice would
prohibit using fake information to create a web-based e-mail account,
meaning it would be illegal to open an account with a fictitious name.
E-mail aliases would not be banned, the Times said, but they would be
traceable to the actual account holder.
Critics say such a law would be unenforceable unless it required an
identity verification process, such as registering for an e-mail address
with a national ID card. (Many e-mail providers currently require only a
name and password to open an account, and European citizens could open
an account with U.S. e-mall providers, which are not bound by the
directive.) Moreover, the law could make paying cash for a pre-paid ceil
phone account a thing of the past in Germany, as pre-paid accounts do
not acquire or retain any personal information about the subscriber.
A draft law in the Netherlands would also go further than the EU
directive, this time by requiring phone companies to save records of a
caller's precise location during an entire mobile phone
conversation. The Dutch Data Protection Agency has said this proposed
law "implies surveillance of the movement of large amounts of
innocent citizens" and concluded in January that the draft
disregarded privacy protections in the European Convention on Human
Rights.
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Similarly, the German technology trade association Bitkom said the
draft there violated the German Constitution. Internet and
telecommunications industry associations raised objections when the
directive was being debated, but at that time their concerns were about
the length of time the data would have to be stored and how the
companies would be compensated for the cost of gathering and keeping the
information. The directive left both decisions in the hands of national
governments, setting a range of six months to two years. The German
draft settled on six months, while in the Netherlands it is 18 months.
Currently, Internet service providers in Europe usually keep
customer data--including how it was sent and by whom, but not its
content--for about three months and routinely share it with police
officials who have legally valid orders, according to the Times.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Association of Records Managers &
Administrators (ARMA) Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.