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Privacy International
@privacyint
For a world where technology will empower and enable us, not exploit our data for profit and power.
Londonprivacyinternational.orgErregistratze-data: 2009(e)ko otsaila

Privacy International erabiltzailearen txioak

Finkatutako Txioa
BREAKING: Nearly 4 years after our complaint and 2 after starting their investigation, the French data protection authority CNIL finds breaches in Criteo's activities, and proposes a fine of €60 million. Why did this happen and why does it matter? 👇
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Experts and share tips on compartmentalizing your online activity, limiting your phone's tracking abilities etc. “The importance that people place on their data—which should have always been high—should now be a priority." -
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Searches for “How to monitor employees working from home” increased 1,705% in April 2020 compared to 2019. Employers didn’t have to look far for the answer, as Microsoft Office 365 suite had everything to monitor employees at home. Read our research: pvcy.org/WFH
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The Covid-19 pandemic pushed governments to quickly provide emergency welfare benefits for their populations. While in good faith, some of these efforts didn't adequately prioritise equality, transparency, and privacy. Read our op-ed 👇
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To ensure that this is not the reality we soon find ourselves in, we are challenging Microsoft by working with the ICO - the UK data protection regulator - on a consultation about employee monitoring to fight the spread of privacy-invasive features in people’s lives. 💪
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Two bleak features - Audit and Content Search - give admins access to e-mails, documents and 1-1 messages, and lets them see the actions someone has performed, what device they logged in with and when emails were deleted. 😬
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Employers didn’t have to look too far, as Microsoft Office 365 suite (Word, Outlook, Excel etc) had everything someone would need to monitor at home performance. We thought a lot of employees wouldn’t be aware, so we did some research.
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The projects presented in our latest podcast in Jordan and Lebanon are part of wider work supported by to research issues around sexual, reproductive & maternal health and data governance in the Middle East. Tune in and listen now 🎧
Txioa apaitu
In our latest podcast we spoke to @nourelarnaout from the Global Health Institute @ghiaub and Yousef Khader from the Global Health Development, Eastern Mediterranean Public Health Network @EMPHNET
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Très bonne nouvelle : la pourrait sanctionner Criteo, entreprise de surveillance dont le modèle économique repose sur le profilage invasif et illégal des internautes, d'une amende de 60M d'€. Merci , et pas bravo à la Startup Nation.
Txioa apaitu
BREAKING: Nearly 4 years after our complaint and 2 after starting their investigation, the French data protection authority CNIL finds breaches in Criteo's activities, and proposes a fine of €60 million. Why did this happen and why does it matter? 👇 privacyinternational.org/advocacy/2426/
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We talked about how their work required them to consider key issues around gender and and power including the digital divide, data governance and specific challenges of deploying digital health interventions in fragile settings
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In order to understand how new welfare benefits use data, we researched Covid-19 benefits. We found that countries didn't always prioritise individual's fundamental rights over innovation and efficiency. Read our latest welfare piece to learn more 👇
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Criteo is just one of numerous companies that you've probably never heard about, but can be sure knows about YOU. We welcome CNIL's findings and hope surveillance advertising companies will take the hint and start complying with the law for once.
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(3) They do cross-device tracking and get more from other data brokers, developing an incredibly fine-grained view of most of an individual's activities through the day. That's also unlawful, as no one's told where all this data comes from.
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(2) It considers that pseudonymising people's data means they can't know who individuals are and therefore it's all fine. That's not true - they know exactly who people are, because at the heart of their services is "individual shopper level" prediction.
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They spy on people's online browsing behaviour to try and predict their propensity to engage with specific products, and the types of ad design they would best respond to. In short, it's a manipulation machine.
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Criteo is an online advertising platform claiming to have captured the "identity and interest data" of 72% of all internet users, building "the world's largest open shopper data set", allowing them to "precisely predict what inspires shoppers and drive higher engagement"
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This is meant to be “less invasive” & “more proportionate” than GPS ankle tags. Who is the Home Office trying to fool? Facial recognition is a dangerous, discriminatory tech - it regularly misidentifies people of colour & is disproportionately used against minorities.
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In an effort to monitor even more people and reach levels of total surveillance, the Home Office now wants to roll out smartwatches also recording 24/7 location data AND requiring people to scan their faces up to 5 times a day.
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