Joint Civil Society Statement on Privacy in the
Digital Age Submitted to the 27th Session of the UN Human Rights
Council, September 11, 2014
https://www.ifex.org/international/2014/09/12/privacy_digital_age/
This week's discussion of the report on surveillance by the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights at the Human Rights Council is a
critical moment in the global understanding of the human rights
challenges raised by unlawful and arbitrary surveillance. The Office
of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights will present a report
on the right to privacy in the digital age (A/HRC/27/37). As the
report states, "the technological platforms upon which global
political, economic and social life are increasingly reliant are not
only vulnerable to mass surveillance, they may actually facilitate
it" on an unprecedented scale (para 2). It is imperative that the
Council and Member States continue to promote and protect the right
to privacy as technologies evolve and surveillance and data
gathering capabilities become more powerful.
In this context, the Human Rights Council has the opportunity to
demonstrate leadership, promote global understanding of the right to
privacy, and ensure robust state implementation of that right. We
ask the Council to create a new special procedures mandate on the
right to privacy to ensure sustained attention to the issues raised
by the High Commissioner's report within the UN's human rights
institutions.
KEY REPORT FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
The report confirms that "international human rights law provides a
clear and universal framework for the promotion and protection of
the right to privacy, including in the context of domestic and
extraterritorial surveillance, the interception of digital
communications and the collection of personal data" (para 47). This
finding reaffirms the Council's recognition in A/HRC/RES/20/8 that
"the same rights that people have offline must also be protected
online."
The right to privacy is well-established in both the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR). The report recognizes that the
challenges posed by new digital surveillance capabilities do not
confound human rights standards, but rather require re-examination
of and renewed attention to state implementation of established
standards.
Critically, the High Commissioner found that many governments have
failed to meet their obligations under the right to privacy.
Practices in many states have revealed "a lack of adequate national
legislation and/or enforcement, weak procedural safeguards, and
ineffective oversight." Combined with a "disturbing lack of
governmental transparency," these failings have “contributed to a
lack of accountability for arbitrary or unlawful interference in the
right to privacy” (paras 47-48). The research of many of the
undersigned organizations confirms this finding.
As an immediate measure, the High Commissioner called on all states
to "review their own national laws, policies and practices to ensure
full conformity with international human rights law" and address any
shortcomings.
To facilitate national review, the report elaborated on several
issues:
Digital surveillance may engage a state's human rights obligations
extraterritorially, regardless of the nationality or location of
individuals whose communications are under surveillance.
A state's obligations can be engaged if that surveillance involves
the exercise of power or effective control in relation to
communications infrastructure. The same is true where regulatory
jurisdiction over a third party that controls data is exercised,
including where jurisdiction is asserted over the data of private
companies as a result of the incorporation of those companies in the
state in question (para 34). In a globalized world where data is
routinely held in various jurisdictions and can travel across
multiple borders in seconds, this point underlines the importance of
the principle of non-discrimination in ensuring meaningful respect
for privacy.
States should adopt a clear, precise, accessible, comprehensive,
and non-discriminatory legislative framework to regulate all
surveillance conducted by law enforcement or intelligence agencies
(para 50). Surveillance should be undertaken under
accessible law with foreseeable effects in accordance with the rule
of law, including the right to an effective remedy. In many states,
the legal frameworks governing surveillance fail to meet this
standard, generating consequent accountability and transparency
concerns.
The overarching principles in determining whether an
interference is permissible are legality, necessity, and
proportionality (para 23). In particular, it is essential
to reiterate proportionality as a foundational principle. Mass
surveillance is by nature disproportionate and large-scale
collection practices often fall afoul of this principle. As the High
Commissioner notes, "Mass or 'bulk' surveillance programmes may thus
be deemed to be arbitrary, even if they serve a legitimate aim and
have been adopted on the basis of an accessible legal regime. In
other words, it will not be enough that the measures are targeted to
find certain needles in a haystack; the proper measure is the impact
of the measures on the haystack, relative to the harm threatened;
namely, whether the measure is necessary and proportionate" (para
25).
Metadata merits stronger protection than it currently enjoys
under national legal frameworks (paras 19-20). The
interception of data about a communication ("metadata") can be as
sensitive as the interception of the content of a communication.
There is growing recognition that metadata cannot reasonably be
afforded weaker protections than communications content. Such data
is storable, accessible, and searchable, and access to and analysis
of the data can be revelatory and highly invasive.
The interception, acquisition, and retention of data amounts to an
interference with the right to privacy, regardless of whether data
is subsequently consulted or used (para 20). In the
context of mass surveillance programs, "[e]ven the mere possibility
of communications information being captured creates an interference
with privacy, with the potential chilling effect on rights,"
including free expression and association (para 20). It also follows
that mandatory third-party data retention requirements, where
governments require Internet or mobile service providers to store
data about all customers, "appears neither necessary nor
proportionate" (para 26).
A range of other rights may also be affected by
communications surveillance and the collection of personal data,
beyond the right to privacy. The report cites freedom of
opinion and expression; the right to peaceful assembly and
association; to family life; and to health as illustrative examples.
Although beyond the scope of the report, the High Commissioner
stated that the linkages between mass surveillance and effects on
other rights merit further consideration.
States must ensure effective oversight and remedy for
violations of privacy through digital surveillance (paras 37-41).
The report states that oversight by all branches of government and
an independent civilian agency is essential to ensure effective
protection of law. Effective remedies can come in a variety of
forms, but must meet criteria that are well-established in human
rights law.
The private sector should respect human rights if asked to
facilitate surveillance or data collection or when providing
surveillance technology to states (paras 42-46). Where
Internet or telecommunications companies comply with government
requests for user data or surveillance assistance without adequate
safeguards, they risk complicity in resulting violations. The report
calls on companies to "assess whether and how their terms of
service, or their policies for gathering and sharing customer data,
may result in an adverse impact on the human rights of their users,"
implicitly drawing a connection between company data collection
practices and government access to data companies hold (para 44).
When companies provide surveillance technology to states that do not
have adequate legal safeguards, companies risk complicity in
violations of the right to privacy and other human rights (para 43).
A NEW SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY
The High Commissioner's report applies well established standards of
international human rights law and provides a robust and universal
foundation for examining state implementation of human rights
obligations to surveillance and data collection activities. However,
new surveillance capabilities and technologies raise complex and
fast evolving issues.
As a result, the High Commissioner urged "ongoing, concerted
multi-stakeholder engagement" to address challenges related to the
right to privacy (para 49). The report also called for "further
discussion and in-depth study of issues relating to the effective
protection of the law, procedural safeguards, effective oversight,
and remedies," as well as the responsibility of businesses (para
51).
We urge the Council to follow up on the High Commissioner's work,
including by establishing a dedicated special procedure mandate on
the right to privacy for the following reasons:
- A dedicated mandate holder would play a critical role in
developing common understandings and furthering a considered and
substantive interpretation of the right across a variety of
settings, as recommended by the report. A dedicated mandate
holder would also be an independent expert, allowing for a
neutral articulation of the application of the right to privacy
that draws on the input of all stakeholders.
- Establishing a separate mandate for privacy would allow for
the development of a coherent and complementary approach to the
interaction between privacy, freedom of expression, and other
rights.
- A dedicated mandate holder would help assess the
implementation by state and non-state actors of their applicable
international responsibilities and obligations in a sustained
and systematic way. Functions should include carrying out
country visits; collecting best practices; receiving and seeking
information from states, businesses, and other stakeholders; and
issuing recommendations.
Submitted by Human Rights Watch
Endorsed by:
ARTICLE 19
Access
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
Amnesty International
Association for Progressive Communications
Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT)
Electronic Frontier Foundation
International Commission of Jurists (ICJ)
Privacy International