Mientras nadie ha podido entregar una explicación coherente para entender por qué la información de millones de chilenos se vende, este artÃculo publicado hace unos dÃas en la revista Wired nos lleva a reflexionar al respecto. Nuestros datos reflejan nuestras vidas. Entonces si entidades públicas venden esa información para que después nos llame una empresa ofreciendo un teléfono celular o crédito bancario, estarÃan vendiendo parte de nuestras vidas.
Pero lo más complejo es que el gobierno no logre hasta hoy elaborar una respuesta para este asunto. Porque hasta el momento, y para explicar el problema, el vocero del gobierno intentó echarle a la culpa al hacker en vez de evaluar la vulnerabilidad informática de los servicios. Y para qué hablar de la venta de esa información, porque ahà ni siquiera hubo un pronunciamiento.
Al parecer fue mucha información para el vocero de gobierno. Entre las confusiones por los montos que el gobierno va a entregar a los damnificados en Chaitén, no hubo cabida para explicar la "crisis informática" de los servicio públicos.Â
Arturo Arriagada I. Â
Commentary by Bruce Schneier
Our Data, Ourselves
Weird Magazine
In the information age, we all have a data shadow.
We leave data everywhere we go. It's not just our bank accounts and stock portfolios, or our itemized bills, listing every credit card purchase and telephone call we make. It's automatic road-toll collection systems, supermarket affinity cards, ATMs and so on.
It's also our lives. Our love letters and friendly chat. Our personal e-mails and SMS messages. Our business plans, strategies and offhand conversations. Our political leanings and positions. And this is just the data we interact with. We all have shadow selves living in the data banks of hundreds of corporations' information brokers -- information about us that is both surprisingly personal and uncannily complete -- except for the errors that you can neither see nor correct.
What happens to our data happens to ourselves.
This shadow self doesn't just sit there: It's constantly touched. It's examined and judged. When we apply for a bank loan, it's our data that determines whether or not we get it. When we try to board an airplane, it's our data that determines how thoroughly we get searched -- or whether we get to board at all. If the government wants to investigate us, they're more likely to go through our data than they are to search our homes; for a lot of that data, they don't even need a warrant.
Who controls our data controls our lives.
It's true. Whoever controls our data can decide whether we can get a bank loan, on an airplane or into a country. Or what sort of discount we get from a merchant, or even how we're treated by customer support. A potential employer can, illegally in the U.S., examine our medical data and decide whether or not to offer us a job. The police can mine our data and decide whether or not we're a terrorist risk. If a criminal can get hold of enough of our data, he can open credit cards in our names, siphon money out of our investment accounts, even sell our property. Identity theft is the ultimate proof that control of our data means control of our life.
We need to take back our data.
Our data is a part of us. It's intimate and personal, and we have basic rights to it. It should be protected from unwanted touch.
We need a comprehensive data privacy law. This law should protect all information about us, and not be limited merely to financial or health information. It should limit others' ability to buy and sell our information without our knowledge and consent. It should allow us to see information about us held by others, and correct any inaccuracies we find. It should prevent the government from going after our information without judicial oversight. It should enforce data deletion, and limit data collection, where necessary. And we need more than token penalties for deliberate violations.
This is a tall order, and it will take years for us to get there. It's easy to do nothing and let the market take over. But as we see with things like grocery store club cards and click-through privacy policies on websites, most people either don't realize the extent their privacy is being violated or don't have any real choice. And businesses, of course, are more than happy to collect, buy, and sell our most intimate information. But the long-term effects of this on society are toxic; we give up control of ourselves.
---
Bruce Schneier is Chief Security Technology Officer of BT, and author of Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World.
