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A/HRC/31/64




ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION

Distr.: General

8 March 2016


Original: English

Human Rights Council

Thirty-first session

Agenda item 3



Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,

political, economic, social and cultural rights,

including the right to development

Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy, Joseph A. Cannataci

Note by the Secretariat

In the present report, submitted to the Human Rights Council pursuant to Council resolution 28/16, the Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy describes his vision for the mandate, his working methods and provides an insight into the state of privacy at the beginning of 2016 and a work plan for the first three years of the mandate



Contents

Page

I. Introduction 3

II. Working methods of the SRP mandate 3

III. Initial observations on the state of Privacy as of early 2016 9

A. Definition and understanding 9

B. The SRP Privacy Landmark Events for 2015-2016 11

IV. Activities of the Special Rapporteur 15

V. A Ten Point action plan 18

VI. Conclusions 20

Annexes


Annex I – Some challenges faced by the SRP & a vision of the mandate 22

Annex II – A more in-depth look at Open Data & Big Data 24

Annex III – Further reflections about the understanding of privacy 29

Annex IV – A “State of the Union” approach to Privacy 30



I. Introduction

  1. The Human Rights Council established the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on privacy (SRP) in its resolution 28/16 (“The right to privacy in the digital age”). In the resolution the Council emphasizes that Human Rights need to be protected under all circumstances, at all times and in all environments. To achieve this is particularly challenging when it comes to the right to privacy. The rapid development of information technology provides not only new opportunities for social interaction but also raises concerns on how to develop the right further in order to face new challenges.

  2. Pursuant to Human Rights Council resolution 28/16, the Special Rapporteur will report annually to the Council and to the General Assembly. In the present report, the Special Rapporteur describes the mandate’s working methods (Section II), the state of privacy in the year 2016 (Section III.), reports the highlight activities in carrying out the mandate up to this moment in time (Section IV.) and proposes a ten point plan which aims at discovering and further developing the new shape of the right to privacy in the 21st century (Section V.). Finally, the Special Rapporteur presents his conclusions (Section VI.).

  3. The aims and objectives of this report must perforce be very modest. This first report should be understood as being a very preliminary one and should be taken in context: it is being prepared scarcely six months from the beginning of the mandate’s activities which commenced on 1st August 2015. As such, this initial six month period (most of the report was originally drafted by mid-January 2016) has not been sufficient to meet and consult in-depth with a satisfactorily wide spectrum of stakeholders although considerable effort has been invested in doing so with a significant amount of success. The primary aim of this report therefore is to reflect a period where it has been possible to identify a number of issues but not necessarily to definitively prioritise them. It is expected that the Special Rapporteur would be in a much better position to continue an on-going process of properly prioritising action required on issues some time during the next 6-12 months (January 2016-January 2017) after having had the opportunity to meet with and listen to the concerns of many more stakeholders all around the world. Some more reflections about the vision and the challenges facing the SRP are outlined in Annex I.

II. Working methods of the mandate

  1. The SRP immediately set about building up the SRP team composed of persons working for the mandate on a part-time or full-time basis. One of these persons is currently a full-time United Nations (UN) Human rights officer, hired on a temporary contract, while the position is under recruitment. The work of this person is supervised by a more senior UN employee who is also responsible for supporting the work of six other mandate holders. A second part time professional and a part time administrative officer will soon be recruited, as well as a part-time consultant. The SRP is grateful that the Human Rights Council endowed his mandate with this still limited (given the scope of his mandate) but unprecedented level of support to a mandate holder. The other persons in the SRP team are not employed by the UN but are resourced by extra-mural funding obtained by the SRP or may be volunteers.1 The team is often physically spread across at least three geographical locations (currently Malta, the Netherlands and Switzerland) and, as befits the digital age, most of the team meetings are carried out in cyber-space with the working day being opened by an on-line conference call involving all team-members who may be available. During the “morning meeting” team members typically report on work carried out in the previous day, consult about tasks planned for the rest of the working day and plan tasks and events for the following weeks and months. When doing so, their tasks reflect the fact that the work of the SRP may be broadly divided into four categories and any team member may be working concurrently on tasks from each of these categories:

1. Country monitoring

  1. A database of current policies, legislation, procedures and practices is being developed and populated with documents containing a variety of reports as well as copies of legislation. This database will enable the SRP to identify issues of concern, as well as best practices which could then be shared with others.

2. Thematic studies: analysis and assessment

  1. In a world which benefits greatly from an Internet without borders, the SRP’s consultations indicate widespread support for a general principle of

Safeguards without borders

Remedies across borders

  1. This concern with safeguards aimed at protecting privacy and remedies for privacy breaches underpins each of the following thematic study commenced by the SRP mandate in a number of sectors where risks to privacy appear high, and each of which is expected to eventually lead to an ad hoc report being produced reflecting an on-going process of consultations, interactions and observations:

(a) Privacy and Personality across cultures

  1. This study responds to the crying need identified of achieving a better understanding of what privacy is or should be across cultures in 2016 in a way which makes the understanding of the right more relevant to a digital age where the internet operates without borders. In asking the question “Why privacy?” and positing privacy as an enabling right as opposed to being an end in itself, the SRP is pursuing an analysis of privacy as an essential right which enables the achievement of an over-arching fundamental right to the free, unhindered development of one’s personality. This analysis is being carried out in close co-operation with several NGOs and is expected to be the focus of a major international conference which will be organised in 2016. This analysis of privacy is being carried out in a wider context and one where its intersection with other fundamental rights is also being examined. Thus the relationship of privacy with freedom of expression and freedom to access publicly-held information is expected to be examined inter alia also through joint action with other UN Special Rapporteurs and discussions are already underway with the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression in order to explore opportunities for joint action about this matter during 2016-2017.

(b) Corporate on-line business models and personal data use

  1. The first 25 years of the existence of the world-wide web have led to a largely unregulated organic growth of private corporations which have sometimes mushroomed into multinational entities operating across national borders and attracting customers from all across the world. One of the hallmarks of this growth has been the collection and use of all forms of personal data: every search, every read, every e-mail or other form of messaging, every product or service purchased leaves hundreds of thousands of electronic tracks about an individual which are capable of being aggregated into forming a very accurate profile of that individual’s likes, dislikes, moods, financial capabilities, sexual preferences, medical condition, shopping patterns as well as the intellectual, political, religious and philosophical interests and sometimes even the relevant opinions of the netizen. In general, it should be questioned whether the offering of certain online services by certain service providers has to result necessarily in the tracking of the individual’s behaviour to ensure just compensation. This increasingly detailed data-map of consumer behaviour has resulted in personal data becoming a commodity where access to such data or exploitation of such data in a variety of ways is now one of the world’s largest industries generating revenues calculated in hundreds of billions most usually in the form of targeted advertising. Very often it would seem that while consumers may be aware of the user-generated content that they themselves consciously put on-line they are much less aware of the quantity, the quality and the specific uses of the metadata they generate when surfing, chatting, shopping and otherwise interacting on-line. The data available for the profiling of individuals is now in order of magnitude larger than it was in 1991-1992 and the extent of the risks for privacy associated with the use or mis-use of that data are not yet completely understood. There is some evidence that the commodification of personal data, especially in sectors traditionally considered to be sensitive such as that of medical and health data, has increased to an extent where the private individual is neither conscious nor consenting to the sale or multiple re-sales of his or her data. There is also not enough evidence available to properly assess the risk inherent in purportedly anonymised data which can be reverse-engineered in a way such to be linked to an identified or identifiable individual. Such a breach of privacy could potentially pose multiple risks to the individual citizen as well as to the community concerned especially if the access is unauthorised and carried out by state authorities intent on acquiring or retaining power, organised crime, commercial corporations acting illegitimately etc. In the early days of digital computers, one of the main concerns was the use of personal data by the state and the state’s abilities to correlate data held in various sources to form a detailed picture of an individual’s activities and assets. In 2016 it would seem that much more data is held on the individual by corporations than that held by the state. The vast revenues derived from the monetisation of personal data to the extent that it has become a marketable and tradable commodity mean that the incentive for changing the business model simply on account of privacy concerns is not very high. Indeed, it was only when recently risks to privacy threatened the income potential of the business model that some corporations took a stricter more privacy-friendly approach. It would seem opportune that a proper international discussion be held, informed by the collection of an appropriate evidence-base, in order to determine what type of information policy is most suitable to an approach which would maximise protection of and minimise risk to privacy of individual citizens in relation to the data collected about them by corporations. This discussion would be informed about the notions and expectations of privacy that citizens indicate and illustrate in the course of paragraph 8. It is expected that preliminary consultations commenced in 2015, would continue with on-line corporations throughout 2016 with a major public consultation event on this theme being planned for 2017.

(c) Security, surveillance, proportionality and cyberpeace

  1. International concern with security remained at the forefront of developments throughout 2015-2016. The country monitoring process outlined in paragraph 8 above revealed several examples of legislation being rushed through national parliaments in an effort to legitimise the use of certain privacy-intrusive measures by security & intelligence services (SIS) and law enforcement agencies (LEAs) in those particular states. In many of these countries, though unfortunately not all, these legislative measures resulted in public debate about:

(i) the adequacy of oversight mechanisms;

(ii) the distinction between targeted surveillance and mass surveillance (or bulk surveillance as it is euphemistically called in some countries);

(iii) the proportionality of such measures in a democratic society;

(iv) the cost-effectiveness and the overall efficacy of such measures.



  1. Countering terrorism and organised crime as well as other socially-sensitive offences such as paedophilia are the main declared aims of such legislation. Conflicting evidence has been given in these debates, often suggesting that privacy–intrusive measures and especially mass-surveillance will not result in greater security and that intelligence failures need to be addressed by other means. The SRP has continued a programme of continuous engagement with law enforcement agencies and security and intelligence services world-wide in an effort to better understand their legitimate concerns and recognise best practices which could be usefully shared as well as to identify policies, practices and legislation of doubtful usefulness or which present an unacceptable level of risk to privacy nationally and world-wide. In some instances this on-going analysis and assessment becomes almost inextricably entwined with issues of cyber-security and cyber-espionage where a small but growing number of states treat cyber-space as being yet another theatre of operations for a multitude of their security and intelligence agencies and appear as yet unwilling to engage with each other – and sometimes with the SRP - on these issues which not unnaturally also directly impact the privacy of citizens irrespective of their nationality. While not necessarily the primary target of cyber-security and cyber-espionage measures, the ordinary citizen may often get caught in the cross-fire and his or her personal data and on-line activities may end up being monitored in the name of national security in a way which is unnecessary, disproportionate and excessive. Apart from ad hoc investigatory work carried out for the mandate, the SRP is fortunate in having access to a rich evidence-base provided by previous and on-going independent collaborative research in the security field, especially that funded by the European Union2 which may be used to the benefit of all nations. The SRP is pursuing this exploration/study?on four main fronts: a) State surveillance capabilities which are proportionate in scope and adequately constrained by legislative, procedural and technical safeguards including strong oversight mechanisms; b) a focus on targeted as opposed to mass surveillance; c) the access of LEAs and SIS to personal data held by private corporations and other non-public entities; d) a renewed emphasis on Cyberpeace. The SRP is firmly of the opinion that Cyberspace risks being ruined by Cyberwar and Cyber-surveillance and that Governments and other stakeholders should work towards Cyberpeace. In this sense at least, privacy protection is also part of the Cyberpeace movement. In this way, Cyberspace can truly become a digital space where the citizen can expect both privacy and security, a peaceful space which is not constantly being put in jeopardy by the activities of some States over and above the threats posed by terrorists and organised crime.

(d) Open data and Big Data analytics: the impact on privacy

  1. One of the most important issues in information policy and governance in the second decade of the twenty-first century deals with determining the medio stat virtus between, on the one hand, use of data for the benefit of society under the principles of Open Data and, on the other hand, the established principles we have developed to date with a view to protecting fundamental rights like privacy, autonomy and the free development of one’s personality. A more detailed insight into the SRP’s concerns in this area is available in Annex II.

(e) Genetics and privacy

  1. The SRP notes that approximately 25% of the UN’s member states,
    have implemented national criminal offender DNA (DeoxyriboNucleic Acid) database programs. Forensic DNA databases can play an important role in solving crimes but they also raise human rights concerns. Issues include potential misuse for government surveillance, including identification of relatives and non-paternity, and the risk of miscarriages of justice. Furthermore it would appear that the use of DNA database in civilian uses, such as for ID cards and immigration is set to increase exponentially and, within the next few years, it is likely that we will see the first country move forward with a citizen-wide DNA database. In a revival of concerns raised in the 1990s about the use of genetic data in the insurance industry, it is being suggested that personalized medicine will cause many citizens to voluntarily submit their full human genomes to the health care industry. In the wake of these and other concerns, there is an ongoing need for greater public and policy debate as DNA databases expand around the world. The SRP intends to continue to engage with projects which aim to set international human rights standards for DNA databases, by establishing best practice and involving experts, policy makers and members of the public in open debate. It is expected that this engagement would contribute to best practice guidelines developed with civil society input, for feedback and discussion.

(f) Privacy, dignity and reputation

  1. The concern with security and surveillance has possibly been one of the factors deflecting attention from the concern expressed and shared by many citizens about the way that their privacy, their dignity and their reputation are being put at risk on the internet. The digital age has meant that media has developed and changed over the past two decades and this especially in the way that the Internet has enabled normal citizens who do not have the benefit of a formal education in journalism to publish text, audio and video at will at any time of day. This development has empowered citizens in many ways especially in situations where censorship or other obstacles are bypassed and the technology facilitates freedom of expression in a way which benefits democratic aspects of society. On the other hand this new phenomenon of citizen-journalists and bloggers in a fast-moving media world taken together with widespread use of social media has led to a widespread concern that the right to freedom of expression is being abused with a negative impact on other fundamental human rights such as privacy and dignity. Contemporary research over the past five years has highlighted ever-increasing concern of citizens with the ease with which their good name and reputation may be attacked and destroyed on the Internet as well as the sense of helplessness that is felt by many netizens when seeking safeguards and remedies in cases of defamation and/or breach of privacy. The SRP would like to collaborate with the UN Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression, civil society as well as other UN agencies like UNESCO with a view to exploring concrete safeguards and remedies for privacy, dignity and reputation on the internet. As with a number of the other thematic studies outlined above, the relationship between Privacy and Internet Governance remains one of the underlying constant issues which are also relevant to privacy, dignity and reputation.

(g) Biometrics and privacy

  1. A survey of current research suggests a huge surge in interest in using all forms of biometrics for a variety of purposes ranging from law enforcement to personal access to mobile devices. Thus voice and speaker identification, retina scans, gait recognition, face recognition, fingerprint and sub-cutaneous fingerprint technology are just some examples of the many digital technologies being developed and deployed for various purposes across society in the second decade of the 21st century. The SRP intends to continue long-standing engagement with the biometric research community as well as LEAs, SIS and civil society in an attempt at further identifying appropriate safeguards and remedies in the case of usage of biometric devices.

3. Individual complaints

  1. Every so often, and as the mandate will become known, the SRP has received and will presumably continue to receive complaints from individual members of the public residing in a given national territory or from civil society actors of alleged infringements of privacy rights. These complaints are and will be followed up through correspondence with the sources of the complaints and the relevant governments authorities, through the usual communications methodology of Special Procedures mandate holders aimed at clarifying the allegations made, establishing facts and, where necessary, make recommendations for corrective action. These communications may also involve on-line and in-person meetings as appropriate. They will be reported to the Council in the annual reports of the SRP. Should the evidence received warrant particular or urgent attention, and communications prove not to be the appropriate way of responding, the SRP may consider issuing a public expression of concern.

4. Joint actions

  1. The SRP receives regularly requests for and may sometimes initiate joint actions with other Special Rapporteurs. Details about these are published separately in the Communications Report of Special Procedures.

  2. As at 05 March 2016, there has not been the time or the opportunity to collect enough evidence in any of the four categories listed above to do much beyond adhering to two joint actions. It is expected however that information collected in the four categories above will combine to provide the evidence-base required to pursue SRP dialogue and cooperation with relevant states, including through communications, country visits and other modes of collaboration.

5. Building Bridges and a policy of engagement

  1. The SRP has used the mandate to continue and expand previous work aimed at building bridges with and between stakeholders. This leads to an on-going policy of engagement with all classes of stakeholders, including officials and ministers of various governments in their capitals or at bilateral meetings in international fora; meetings with several Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners and especially with the Chairperson of the Art 29 Committee of the EU and the Chairperson of the Council of Europe’s Consultative Committee on Data Protection (T-PD); discussions with technical standards bodies such as the ITU and IEEE; in-depth meetings with civil society either one-to-one or in groups; one-to-one meetings with Human rights specialists or other officials from the Permanent Missions of States to the UN in Geneva, etc. etc. Invitations to deliver keynote speeches, participate in panel discussions, conferences and to meet with members of civil society are received almost literally on a daily basis. Many are accepted, especially those in line with the seven thematic studies indicated in Section II paras 6 to 15 above while several others are regretfully declined especially where time and/or budgetary constraints make such participation unfeasible. Amongst many other results, this policy of engagement has also witnessed the adoption of a Resolution on Cooperation with the UN Special Rapporteur for Privacy3 adopted in October 2015 by the International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners.

III. Privacy at the beginning of the year 2016

A. Definition and understanding

  1. While the concept of privacy is known in all human societies and cultures at all stages of development and throughout all of the known history of humankind it has to be pointed out that there is no binding and universally accepted definition of privacy.4 To understand the right better it is necessary to think of it from two perspectives. First, it should be considered what the positive core of the right encompasses. Secondly, the question arises how to delimit the right in the form of a negative definition. It would appear that we are some distance from having completed these two tasks.

  2. As reaffirmed by the Human Rights Council in resolution 28/16 article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) constitute the basis of the right to privacy in international human rights law. Taken together with a number of other international and national legal instruments including constitutions and ad hoc legislation, this means that there exists world-wide, a considerable legal framework which can be useful to the protection and promotion of privacy. The existence and usefulness of this legal framework is however seriously handicapped by the lack of a universally agreed and accepted definition of privacy. In some cases it may prove to be next to useless if we were to have 193 nations signed up to the principle of protecting privacy if we do not have a clear understanding of what we have agreed to protect.

  3. The absence of a universally agreed and accepted definition of privacy is not the only major handicap faced by the Special Rapporteur on Privacy (SRP). Even had the drafters of all the existing legal instruments, UN and otherwise, included a universally agreed definition of privacy in those instruments we would still have had to deal with what can be conveniently summed up as the Time, Place, Economy and Technology (TPET) dimensions. For the passage of time and the impact of technology, taken together with the different rate of economic development and technology deployment in different geographical locations means that legal principles established fifty years ago (ICCPR) or even thirty-five years ago (e.g. the European Convention on Data Protection) let alone seventy years ago (UDHR) may need to be re-visited, further developed and possibly supplemented and complemented to make them more relevant and useful to the realities of 2016.

  4. Against a background of a lack of a universally agreed definition and TPET, it is clear that for the foundations of “the privacy house” to be strong and fit-for-purpose we first require to establish a re-freshened understanding of what privacy means to different people in different places in different circumstances across the planet. This therefore would prima facie seem to be not only a fundamentally important task but also a priority task for the SRP.

  5. A debate on privacy in some cultures includes the debate on abortion. Without entering into the merits of whether this is correct or otherwise, for the avoidance of doubt, it is being stated that, at this preliminary stage, the focus of the SRP shall be on informational privacy i.e. on the function and role of privacy in determining the flows of information in society and the resultant impact on the development of the personality of individual citizens as well as almost inextricably related issues such as the distribution of power and wealth within society, and this to the exclusion of subjects such as abortion. When doing so however it becomes clear that it is not only privacy that impacts the flows of information in society but also other rights like freedom of expression and freedom of access to publicly-held information. All of these rights are important and commitment to one right should not detract from the importance and protection of another right. Taking rights in conjunction wherever possible is healthier than taking rights in opposition to each other. Thus, properly speaking, it is not helpful to talk of “privacy vs. security” but rather of “privacy and security” since both privacy and security are desiderata ... and both can be taken to be enabling rights rather than ends in themselves. Security is an enabling right for the over-arching right to life while privacy may also be viewed as an enabling right in the overall complex web of information flows in society which are fundamentally important to the value of autonomy and the ability of the individual to identify and choose between options in an informed manner as he or she develops is or her own personality throughout life.

  6. When launching the debate on the understanding of what privacy is and should be in 2016, the SRP wishes to focus on fundamentals and to avoid the debate being side-tracked by what may be perceived or real local or cultural differences at the fringes of privacy as opposed to the strong core of privacy-values which may eventually be found to enjoy universal consensus. In order to help focus a fresh, structured debate on fundamentals the SRP intends to provocatively posit privacy as being an enabling right as opposed to being an end in itself. Several countries around the world have identified an over-arching fundamental right to dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality. Countries as geographically far apart as Brazil and Germany have this right written into their constitution and it is the SRP’s contention that a) such a right to dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality should be considered to be universally applicable and b) that already-recognised rights such as privacy, freedom of expression and freedom of access to information constitute a tripod of enabling rights which are best considered in the context of their usefulness in enabling a human being to develop his or her personality in the freest of manners. Positing privacy and better still, the question “Why Privacy?” in the context of a wider debate about the fundamental right to dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality reflects the realities of life in the digital age and should help all participants in the debate, irrespective of which country or culture they may hail from, to focus on the fundamentals of the development of one’s personality and what kind of a life they would like privacy to help protect rather than lose too much time on what privacy-relevant traditions in any given culture they would need to focus upon or defend/promote.

  7. It will be seen that, in many cases, the debate on privacy cannot be usefully divorced from that on the value of autonomy or self-determination. The latter term is one which has been discussed often within UN and other circles and, when related to privacy and personality rights, in some countries such as Germany where it has, since 1983, given additionally rise to a constitutional right to “informational self-determination”. The appeal and validity of this concept needs to be evaluated further in the context of a global discussion on how the right to privacy should be better understood in 2016, possibly in the context of a discussion of the protection and promotion of the fundamental right to dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality.

  8. The tripod of enabling rights mentioned above – privacy, freedom of expression and freedom of access to information – existed before the advent of digital technologies. As did the right to dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality. Digital technology has however resulted in a huge impact on these rights since both off-line (eg through credit cards, RFID and other electronic devices) and on-line where, today, netizens generate tens of thousands of more data-sets about themselves than they did two decades ago before they started going on-line in droves. Mobile devices and converging technologies such as mobile smart phones - where telephony, the Internet and photography converge - create a new way of life, new comforts and new expectations both in terms of convenience as well as for privacy.

  9. The impact of new technologies also means that we may have to re-visit the distinctions between individual and collective privacy as well as expectations of privacy in both public and private spaces, always in the context of dignity and the free, unhindered development of one’s personality.

B. Initial observations in 2015-2016

  1. Choosing which were the most important events in the Privacy calendar for 2015-2016 is a difficult task and the resources were not available to the SRP to carry this out rigorously and scientifically during the first six months of the mandate. Moreover the SRP does not wish to substitute the important role played by civil society actors such as Privacy International and its affiliates which for the best part of twenty years have organised their Big Brother Awards5 which shine a light on privacy deeds and misdeeds. These succeed in delivering in considerable more detail and at a national level much more than can be done in this brief report to the HRC. On the other hand, the SRP would like to commend good practices, good laws, good court decisions indeed any good ideas which may promote and increase the protection of privacy so, without the pretension of the following being in any way an exhaustive list, and in no particular order, the following important developments are being brought to the attention of the HRC:

Wise restraint – a no to back doors from the Netherlands and the USA

  1. Jointly to the governments of the United States of America and the Kingdom of the Netherlands which should be complimented on the restraint demonstrated in their unwillingness to permit the law to be used to engineer back-doors in communications. On the 4th January 2016, it was announced that the Dutch government has formally opposed the introduction of backdoors in encryption products. A government position paper6, published by the Ministry of Security and Justice and signed by the security and business ministers, concludes that "the government believes that it is currently not appropriate to adopt restrictive legal measures against the development, availability and use of encryption within the Netherlands." The conclusion comes at the end of a five-page run-through of the arguments for greater encryption and the counter-arguments for allowing the authorities access to the information. "By introducing a technical input into an encryption product that would give the authorities access would also make encrypted files vulnerable to criminals, terrorists and foreign intelligence services," the paper noted. "This could have undesirable consequences for the security of information communicated and stored, and the integrity of ICT systems, which are increasingly of importance for the functioning of the society."7

  2. The Dutch position seems to be more clear cut than the similar US position which preceded it by some three months when, in early October 2015 FBI Director James Comey Jr. said in testimony on Capitol Hill that the administration is not pressing legislation, for now, that would force companies to decrypt customer data. “After months of deliberation, the Obama administration has made a long-awaited decision on the thorny issue of how to deal with encrypted communications: It will not — for now — call for legislation requiring companies to decode messages for law enforcement”8. What is of greater concern and which came to the fore in the recent Apple vs FBI Case, is the position that the US administration “will continue trying to persuade companies that have moved to encrypt their customers’ data to create a way for the government to still peer into people’s data when needed for criminal or terrorism investigations.”9 The SRP’s position on the Apple vs FBI case has been largely though independently articulated in the High Commissioner’s statement of 4 March 201610. It is encouraging to note the latest comments made by US Defense Secretary Ash Carter when he declared “that strong encryption is essential to the nation's security… Defense Secretary Ash Carter told a tech industry audience on Wednesday 2 March 2016 that he's "not a believer in back doors," or encryption programs that leave openings for outsiders to read coded files.”11 This is consistent with his statements in October 201512 and is a position which should be encouraged and reinforced.

The beginning of the judicial end for mass surveillance – the substantive issue

  1. On 06 October 2015, the Court of Justice of the European Union delivered a judgment in the case of Maximillian Schrems versus the Data Protection Commissioner of the Republic of Ireland. The Court declared void a decision by the European Commission which established the so-called “Safe Harbour” framework and which was based on Directive 95/46/EC. The SRP directs attention to what is probably one of the most important parts of that decision from a precedent-confirming (and setting) point of view:

“94. In particular, legislation permitting the public authorities to have access on a generalised basis to the content of electronic communications must be regarded as compromising the essence of the fundamental right to respect for private life, as guaranteed by Article 7 of the Charter”

  1. Some debate will doubtless ensue over the precise meaning of “access on a generalised basis” and here the court is clearly referring to content of communications as opposed to metadata but it will be interesting to see which European law legitimising mass surveillance, if any would pass the test of such a standard if the ECJ would be inclined to continue to apply it strictly in future. The ambiguity however is at least partially dispelled when the Schrems decision is read together with the Zakharov judgement indicated below which forms as much a part of EU law as it does for other Council of Europe member states.

The importance of having a remedy – enforcement and procedural issues

  1. Again, with reference to the Schrems case just quoted above, the SRP welcomes that the ECJ has become a forum for people like the applicant. Max Schrems started the case as an individual concerned about the consequences of the development of modern information technology for his dignity as a human being in a democratic society. The opportunity for individuals to argue their case and to defend their rights before a supra-national public institution, challenging existing power relations, is essential for creating knowledge to enhance the welfare of our society, and consistent with the development of international human rights law. The existence of such mechanisms is absolutely crucial to protect human rights and to restore trust in the use of technology by States or other actors.

  2. It is also the harbinger of a new development in society, one pointing out that if you have a right this needs to be respected and enforced anywhere not just the place where servers are based.

  3. The judgment of the ECJ also demonstrates the added-value of regional policy approaches which may possibly serve in future to promote bottom-up, participatory legal instruments with a wider, global reach.

Mere existence of a secret surveillance measure is a violation of the right to private life

  1. The Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights - in its decision Roman Zakharov v Russia [2015] Eur Court HR (No 47143/06) (4 December 2015)13 - has unanimously held that the Russian system of secret interception of mobile telephone communications was a violation of article 8 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedom. In addition, and very interestingly, the Court accepted that if certain conditions are satisfied an applicant can claim to be the victim of a violation of article 8 due to the mere existence of a secret surveillance measure. Perhaps most importantly was the declaration by the court that basically outlawed mass surveillance systems in a way which is even more explicit than that of the ECJ in Schrems.

“270. The Court considers that the manner in which the system of secret surveillance operates in Russia gives the security services and the police technical means to circumvent the authorisation procedure and to intercept any communications without obtaining prior judicial authorisation. Although the possibility of improper action by a dishonest, negligent or over-zealous official can never be completely ruled out whatever the system (see Klass and Others, cited above, § 59), the Court considers that a system, such as the Russian one, which enables the secret services and the police to intercept directly the communications of each and every citizen without requiring them to show an interception authorisation to the communications service provider, or to anyone else, is particularly prone to abuse. The need for safeguards against arbitrariness and abuse appears therefore to be particularly great.”

  1. This decision sets up a very important benchmark highlighting as it does the requirements for reasonable suspicion and prior judicial authorisation as well as the unacceptable nature of “a system…which enables the secret service and the police to intercept directly the communications of each and every citizen without requiring them to show an interception authorisation”. This then would be the test against which all existing and new proposed legislation about surveillance in any European country must be measured. The SRP also notes with grave concern various reports about a decision of the Russian Duma (Parliament) which would enable decisions of the European Court of Human Rights to be overruled14. If these reports are true, this may, in practice, remove a very important remedy available to citizens of countries which have ratified the European Convention on Human Rights including remedies in the case of violation of the right to private life. The SRP invites the Government of the Russian Federation to assist the SRP in further verifying these reports, examining the law in question more deeply for nuance and, if the reports are fundamentally accurate, persuade the Duma to revoke the law of 4 December 2015 and thus restore the efficacy of the remedies available to Russian citizens in terms of the European Convention on Human Rights including their remedies against the state in cases where their right to privacy is infringed.

The UK’s Investigatory Powers Bill

  1. Recognition is due to the three joint UK Parliamentary committees: the science and technology committee on February 1, the intelligence and security committee on February 9 and most importantly, the joint committee for the bill itself on February 11, 2016 for their consistent, strong, if occasionally over-polite, criticism of the UK Government’s Investigatory Powers Bill. The joint committee for the draft investigatory powers bill made 86 recommendations for changes to the bill in its report, concentrating on issues of clarity, judicial oversight and justification of the various powers. Recognition is also due to the UK Government which has taken heed of advice from various quarters and which is using the IPB to introduce much-needed reinforcement of oversight mechanisms. While there may still be some room for improvement in this area too, these are steps in the right direction. At the time of the submission of this SRP report to the HRC, the SRP’s initial assessment of the latest version of the Bill published on 1 March 2016 however leads to serious concern about the value of some of the revisions most recently introduced. At the time of writing, not only do some of the UK Government’s proposals appear to run counter to the logic and findings of UN Special Rapporteur on Counter-terrorism Ben Emmerson in his 2014 report dealing inter alia with mass surveillance15, but they prima facie fail the benchmarks set by the ECJ in Schrems and the ECHR in Zakharov. The SRP firmly encourages the three committees of the UK Parliament commended above to continue, with renewed vigour and determination, to exert their influence in order that disproportionate, privacy-intrusive measures such as bulk surveillance and bulk hacking as contemplated in the Investigatory Powers Bill be outlawed rather than legitimised. It would appear that the serious and possibly unintended consequences of legitimising bulk interception and bulk hacking are not being fully appreciated by the UK Government. Bearing in mind the huge influence that UK legislation still has in over 25% of the UN’s members states that still form part of the Commonwealth, as well as its proud tradition as a democracy which was one of the founders of leading regional human rights bodies such as the Council of Europe, the SRP encourages the UK Government to take this golden opportunity to set a good example and step back from taking disproportionate measures which may have negative ramifications far beyond the shores of the United Kingdom. More specifically, the SRP invites the UK Government to show greater commitment to protecting the fundamental right to privacy of its own citizens and those of others and also to desist from setting a bad example to other states by continuing to propose measures, especially bulk interception and bulk hacking, which prima facie fail the standards of several UK Parliamentary Committees, run counter to the most recent judgements of the European Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights, and undermine the spirit of the very right to privacy. Finally, the SRP invites the UK Government to work closely with the mandate, especially in the context of its thematic study on surveillance, in an effort to identify proportionate measures which enhance security without being overly privacy-intrusive.

First small steps towards cyberpeace?

  1. The efforts of the USA and China in leading efforts to start defusing the situation in cyberspace deserve recognition.

  2. There are possibly three main dimensions to cyberpeace all threatened by on-line espionage:

(i) sabotage and warfare;

(ii) intellectual property rights and economic espionage



(iii) civil rights and surveillance.

  1. While privacy is mostly concerned with the third dimension i.e. civil rights and surveillance, this is often also caught up in discussions about the first and second dimensions. In September 2015 it was announced that the USA and China had agreed “that neither government would support or conduct cyber-enabled theft of intellectual property” and that “both countries are committed to finding appropriate norms of state behavior in cyberspace within the international community. The countries also agreed to create a senior experts group for further cyber affairs discussion”16 Not only did the US and China follow up this important step forward with cyber talks in December 2015 but they seem to have set an example for other countries too: “the U.S. announcement was followed by a similar agreement between the UK and China, and a report that Berlin would sign a “no cyber theft” deal with Beijing in 2016. In November 2015, China, Brazil, Russia, the United States, and other members of the G20 accepted the norm against conducting or supporting the cyber-enabled theft of intellectual property.”17 This is still some way off from achieving complete agreements about cyber-war or on-line surveillance and the impact of espionage on privacy of citizens but at least it is a start and the SRP cannot but try to persuade all parties concerned that the discussions should extend to include concrete measures for respect of on-line privacy too.

IV. Activities of the Special Rapporteur

Highlight Activities carried out by the Special Rapporteur

Resourcing the SRP mandate

  1. Since the mandate is a new one, since the formal budget for the mandate was not approved until January 2016 and since the mandate commenced on 01 August 2015 i.e. when most of Europe – and certainly many members of the UN OHCHR secretariat in Geneva – were on holiday, it took several weeks for the Mandate to be provided any form of support by UN OHCHR staff and to date such administrative support is provided on a stopgap basis pending recruitment of staff which process is expected to be completed by June 2016. On assessing the resourcing situation SRP took immediate steps to source extra-mural funding outside UN sources. A post-doc researcher (with a PhD in privacy and the right to be forgotten) was recruited with effect from October 2015 on a part time and, with effect from January 2016 on a full-time basis in order to secure some assistance with the substantive part of the work required by the mandate. This non-UN funded full-time resource will be maintained in post until the human resource situation for the mandate stabilises. Volunteer assistance has also been very kindly provided by domain specialists and other staff from the SRP’s home institutions i.e. the Department of Information Policy & Governance within the Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences of the University of Malta and the STeP (Security, Technology & e-Privacy) Research Group at the Faculty of Law in the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. This assistance which, together with that of the UN staff in Geneva, is very gratefully acknowledged, enables the mandate to live on until capacity is suitably increased and a more sustainable support structure which is fit-for-purpose can come into being.

A road-map for the SRP mandate - Formulating the ten-point plan

  1. Over and above the daily activities outlined in Section II – Working Methods of the SRP mandate, considerable time was invested in developing the ten-point plan outlined in Section V below and in consultation with many stakeholders about the plan.

Engagement in multiple events

  1. The SRP accepted invitations for meetings, conferences, panels and 1:1 consultations especially those which helped maintain an on-going policy of engagement about the seven thematic studies outlined in Para 4.2 above. These included (non-exhaustive list follows):

(a) Panel discussion Inextricably intertwined: freedom of expression and privacy in Internet Governance MAPPING Annual Stakeholders Assembly, Hannover Germany – 22 Sep 2015

(b) Meeting with Director of Global Affairs, Human Rights Watch, 30 Sep 2015Participation in and presentation to seminar on Data protection and privacy in statistics, UN, Geneva, 13-14 October 2015;

(c) Meeting with the Deputy Secretary General of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), Geneva, 14 October 2015;

(d) Organised and led Panel on Privacy and Surveillance at conference for intelligence services Intelligence in the Knowledge Society 2015, Bucharest, Romania – 16 October 2015

(e) Keynote Speech – Privacy in the Digital Age - International Conference of Data Protection & Privacy Commissioners, Closed session, Amsterdam 27 October 2015

(f) Participated in Round Table discussion Tour du Monde18 International Conference of Data Protection & Privacy Commissioners, Open session, Amsterdam 29 October 2015

(g) Participated in multiple sessions, public and bilateral, at the Internet Governance Forum, Joao Pessoa, Brazil 09-13 November 2015 19



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