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Legal Issues and Opportunities arising from Web 2.0, including privacy and intellectual property.
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WEB 2.0: LEGAL ISSUES AND OPPORTUNITIES
January 20th, 2009
Overview
A New Technology... Legal Issues
Privacy AOL Google Social networks
Intellectual Property Legal Opportunities
Ask Your Lawmaker
A New Technology
Legal issues and opportunities may arise from new technology or novel way of using technology
Internet & Web 2.0: distinctive characteristics Connectivity Sharing Social Freedom Communication Search engines & data mining
Keep in mind that law often moves slowly...
Legal Issues
Privacy Increased sharing (video, text, photos...) Public profiles? Proliferation of information; information as a
resource Advertising
Intellectual property (copyright et al.) Sharing of copyrighted material Digital Rights Management Collaborative tools
Internet Privacy
The ability to control what information one reveals about oneself over the Internet, and to control who can access that information...
Questions to consider: Who can see your information? Is your information safe? How is your information being utilised?
Search history
Privacy Law
Reasonably modern innovation (1890 ~) Existing privacy law embodies several legal
concepts Differs across countries Tort law: intrusion of solitude, public disclosure of
private facts, false light, appropriation Right to privacy (US constitution, NZ Privacy Act 1993) ‘Expectation of privacy’ (public/private)
All New Zealand-based websites require privacy statements (Privacy Act 1993)
“The communications revolution wrought by the Internet has rendered existing privacy jurisprudence obsolete.” (Gunasekara & Toy [G&T], 2008)
The “AOL Search Data Scandal” August 4th, 2006 (Arrington, 2006) An AOL researcher accidently released a text
file containing: twenty million search keywords for over 650,000 users, collected over a 3-month period Deleted by AOL, but already spread over the
Internet Users identified by a unique sequential key
New York Times was able to identify several users by cross-referencing with phonebooks/public records
CTO resigned; class-action suit brought against AOL.
Social Networks
90% of college students use social networking services (Solove [S], 2008)
Large amounts of personal, sometimes intimate data shared Video, photos, comments, wall posts, etc. Perpetual and cumulative Very few people use the built-in privacy options to
control access to their data [S] The obvious risk is reputation
Stalking, re-identification, digital dossiers (Gross & Acquisti, 2005)
NZ Privacy Act has ‘information privacy principles’ [G&T] Don’t cover individual users, but may provide protection
from networks and third parties
Social Networks (Barnes, 2006) In social media spaces, public and private
boundaries are unclear Illusion of privacy leads to boundary problems
Disconnect between perceptions and behaviour regarding privacy
Students strongly disagreed that “everybody should know everything about everyone else”, yet seemed contrastingly unaware of the public nature of social media like Facebook
Barnes discusses social, technical, and legal remedies
Some Terms Of Use...
By posting User Content to any part of the Site, you automatically grant, and you represent and warrant that you have the right to grant, to the Company an irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license (with the right to sublicense) to use, copy, publicly perform, publicly display, reformat, translate, excerpt (in whole or in part) and distribute such User Content for any purpose, commercial, advertising, or otherwise, on or in connection with the Site or the promotion thereof, to prepare derivative works of, or incorporate into other works...
Most sites are a lot more respectful than this! Many sites have well-developed privacy policies
and terms of use.
Google & Privacy
http://www.google.com/privacy.html Google collect incredibly vast amounts of user
data Controversies
Gmail Machine email reading to improve relevance of
advertisements Street View
Public/private property People captured in images
Search histories Kept for two years; identified via a cookie
Street View and Gmail
Intellectual Property
Copyright, patents, registered designs, trademarks, performer’s rights, moral rights, trademarks, database rights...
All normal copyright provisions apply on the Internet, eg. ownership, lifetime
Napster, Kazaa, BitTorrent, IRQ... Digital Rights Management (DRM) Additional risks given the collaborative,
sharing, and informal nature of Web 2.0 Collaborative works YouTube
Collaborative Works (JISC, 2008) Many Web 2.0 sites enable development
of collaborative works Lack of clarity regarding ownership in
collaborations Multiple layers or rights Industry copyright traditions Policing infringements Exceptions User attitudes
Who owns copyright? Risks in 3rd party copyright and ‘implied license’ Contractual relationships
YouTube
Copyrighted material (consider ‘fair use’) TV shows, movie clips, music
On upload, checked using ‘Video ID’; however, Youtube maintains that goes far beyond its legal obligations in assisting content owners to protect their works (AFP, 2008)
Takedown requests under Digital Millennium Copyright Act 1998
Defining case: Viacom
Viacom vs. YouTube
Viacom sued YouTube, seeking: $1bn in damages ‘Discovery’ phase
User data Source code for YouTube and Google (as Viacom
maintained the code treated copyrighted material ‘differently’)
“A US judge has ordered Google to expose to Viacom the video-viewing habits of everyone who has ever used YouTube” (AFP, 2008) IP addresses & usernames Ruling condemned as a major blow to privacy;
Judge Louis Stanton dismissed privacy concerns as “speculative”
Legal Opportunities
It’s far from all bad news... Web 2.0 presents a number of opportunities
to improve and enhance legal discourse Ask Your Lawmaker (www.askyourlawmaker.org) vLex (www.vLex.com) Change.gov (www.change.gov) Police Act Review Wiki
(www.policeact.govt.nz/wiki/) Although then there’s also...
Rate My Cop (www.ratemycop.com)
Ask Your Lawmaker
USA; Capitol News Connection (a public radio service)
Allows users to submit questions for journalists to ask lawmakers (such as Congress members); questions are voted on, and the most popular are asked
References
Arrington, M. (2006, ). AOL Proudly Releases Massive Amounts of Private Data. Retrieved January 19, 2009, from http://www.techcrunch.com/2006/08/06/aol-proudly-releases-massive-amounts-of-user-search-data/
AFP (2008, July 3). Judge orders Google to give YouTube user data to Viacom. AFP. Retrieved January 19, 2009, from http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gvFPgT3MNrzaN7r-Y37eFI-qv4bA
Barnes, S. (2006). A privacy paradox: Social Networking in the United States. First Monday, 11(9). Retrieved January 19, 2009, from http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_9/barnes/index.html
Gross, R., & Acquisti, A. (2005). Information Revelation and Privacy in Online Social Networks [Electronic version]. Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society, 71-80. doi:http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1102199.1102214 from ACM.
Gunasekara, G. & Toy, A. (2008) "MYSPACE" OR PUBLIC SPACE: THE RELEVANCE OF DATA PROTECTION LAWS TO ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKING, New Zealand Universities Law Review, 23(2), 191-214.
JISC (2008). Legal Issues arising from Web 2.0 engagement in FE and HE. Session at JISC Conference, April 15th, 2008.
Privacy Commissioner (n.d.). The Privacy Act and Codes. Retrieved January 19, 2009, from http://www.privacy.org.nz/the-privacy-act-and-codes/
Solove, D. J. (2008, August). Do social networks bring the end of privacy? Scientific American. Retrieved January 19, 2009, from http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=do-social-networks-bring
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