Technology is gradually eroding personal privacy as well as putting people's
lives at risk.
This was the stark warning from the
Royal Academy of Engineering
in its
report
on privacy and surveillance in the UK.
It paints an alarming picture about how new technologies are gradually
eroding personal privacy and the ways they could be abused.
"Advances in technology have the potential to do great good, but they also
carry the risk of doing damage if they are introduced without proper care and
forethought," warned the report.
It gave some scenarios about how personal data could be abused. For example
although it may sound far fetched, it said biometric data on ID cards and
passports could be used by terrorists who could use this information as the
trigger to detonate specially crafted bombs against specific nationalities or
ethnic groups.
Another that may sound more plausible is misuse of personal data by
Governments and other organisations.
"It is not entirely absurd to imagine that supermarkets' loyalty card data
might one day be used by the Government to identify people who ignored advice to
eat healthily, or who drank too much, so that they could be given a lower
priority for treatment by the NHS," said the study.
The report echoes closely stark warnings made last year by
Information
Commissioner, Richard Thomas. In its report,
A
Surveillance Society, which looked at surveillance in 2006 and projects
forward ten years to 2016, he warned we have already unwittingly let our lives
be tracked by visible and invisible means.
"Two years ago I warned that we were in danger of sleepwalking into a
surveillance society. Today I fear that we are in fact waking up to a
surveillance society that is already all around us," he said.
However, the chairman of the group report, Professor Nigel Gilbert, said the
RAE's aim was not to scare people but to open up the issues to debate.
"We need to think very carefully about contingency plans," he said, "about
what can go wrong and what we are going to do about it when it does go wrong,"
he said.
The report said it was perfectly possible to develop technologies that didn't
compromise personal privacy and security and engineers should play an important
role in the research and development of these.
"ID or 'rights' cards can be designed so that they can be used to verify
essential information without giving away superfluous personal information or
creating a detailed audit trail of individuals' behaviour [or] sensitive
personal information stored electronically could potentially be protected from
theft or misuse by using digital rights management technology.
Engineering ingenuity should be exploited to explore new ways of protecting
privacy," the report read.
It also recommended the creation of a digital charter which would outline an
individual's rights to manage, share and protect the data being collected about
them.
It also called for tougher penalties for people and companies that abuse data
protection laws saying current sanctions were "close to trivial".
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