(2019) From Law to Engineering: A Computer Science Perspective on Privacy & Data Protection.
Abstract
Privacy and data protection regulation tries to strike a balance between legitimate data use and the right to personal privacy. Nevertheless, the advances in computer science pose new challenges to this careful balance. Data-driven analytics as well as resulting data use and business models e.g. for machine learning, big data and automated decision-making threaten to make individuals, their behaviour and their decision-making completely transparent and predictable, deepening the power asymmetry between individuals and data controllers. But the nature of computer science with regards to privacy is Janus-faced. The ever-progressing digitalization also requires digital solutions for effective privacy protection. Computer science can and has to act as an enabler of privacy-friendly data processing. The role of privacy engineering and privacy-enhancing technologies by far exceeds just guaranteeing legal compliance. In fact, the crucial value of privacy engineering is to lessen the latent conflict arising from this power asymmetry by empowering the individual and building trust by giving technical privacy assurances. In this chapter, we discuss the core concepts of privacy engineering, provide some examples of the state of the art, and discuss the relation between privacy principles and technical measures.
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Divisions: | Michael Backes (InfSec) |
Depositing User: | Ninja Marnau |
Date Deposited: | 25 Sep 2018 09:46 |
Last Modified: | 18 Jul 2019 12:08 |
Primary Research Area: | NRA1: Trustworthy Information Processing |
URI: | https://publications.cispa.saarland/id/eprint/2648 |
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