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شارع منظرة إنحناء يدعو رسالة حثّ لعزلة حراسة إصلاحيوم الجمعة, أبريل - نيسان [24ث], 2009 ب [كريس] ويليامس | يثبّط بسنون من عناد مزعومة [إين دلينغ ويث] شكاوي حول [بريفس-ينفرينجنغ] [نو تشنولوج], قد دعا نشط لسياسيات أن يتحرّى وأصلحت المعلومة مندوبة [أفّيس] ([إيك]). [لوندون-بسد] [برسّور غرووب] قال عزلة دوليّة (بي) ال [إيك] إستجابة هذا أسبوع إلى شكاوي حول [غوغل] شارع منظرة كان التبن نهائيّة. شاهدت يعطي شارع ال [ألّ-كلر] تحت المعطيات حماية عمل, المنظمة يقال بالأمس: "في عالم حيث كثير الناس [تويت], [فسبووك] و [بلوغ] هو مهمّة أن يأخذ عاديّة إحساس مقاربة نحو شارع منظرة والمحدودة عزلة تدخل نسبيّا هو يمكن سبّبت." PI sharply criticised the decision, claiming it showed it had become “official policy” at the ICO not to stand in the way of business interests. The group wanted Street View to be suspended while the questions over its legal status and the effectiveness of its face-blurring technology were answered. “The gloves are now off,” said PI director Simon Davies. “After ten years of failed complaints and undermining by that office of the core data protection principles, we have decided that there is no further point in trying to educate the officials there.” Over the years the group has written to the ICO about the National DNA Database, fingerprinting in schools and automated number plate recognition. All its complaints have been overruled or shelved. “We fear that the Commissioner is content to uphold fringe cases of occasional security abuses while allowing new technologies and technologies to cut a vast swathe through privacy,” PI said. PI is not alone in believing the ICO has failed in its duties. The regulator’s decision last year not to take any action over BT and Phorm’s secret trials of internet interception and profiling systems this month prompted the European Commission to initiate legal proceedings against the UK government. Brussels said the trials were a breach of the ePrivacy Directive, which the ICO is responsible for enforcing. PI said the regulator lacks the technological expertise to understand the impact of new technologies. It called for an independent advisory board to be urgently established. Davies said: “The Information Commissioner has clearly decided that pragmatism and commercial interest should triumph over principle. This is a dangerous trend and one that is clearly responsible for Britain’s appalling surveillance culture.” The group is now taking advice from MPs and peers on what Parliamentary process could be used to reform the ICO. ® UpdateThe ICO sent this response:
Have Your Say: Street View nod prompts call for privacy watchdog reform Please read our posting guidelines before posting. Alternatively you can discuss this report in our forum . 2 Responses to “Street View nod prompts call for privacy watchdog reform”
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It is nice to see that the ICO believes it is very clear on the DPA.
Isn’t the ICO responsible for enforcing RIPA?
It is clear that they aren’t enforcing that very well either.