Australian governments agree to share data

Concerns raised data could be misused

By Casey Tonkin on Aug 17 2021 09:29 AM
https://ia.acs.org.au/content/ia/article/2021/australian-governments-agree-to-share-data.html?ref=newsletter


State, territory, and federal governments have agreed to the first national 
data sharing program that will ease the movement of data between jurisdictions.

The formation of the Australian Data Network follows an intergovernmental data 
sharing agreement signed by the National Cabinet in early July which commits 
Australian state, territorial and federal governments to share data with one 
another “where it can be done securely, safely, lawfully and ethically” and “in 
accordance with established privacy standards”.

At a meeting last Friday, data and digital ministers from the Commonwealth, 
NSW, Victoria, South Australia, and the ACT worked out which policy areas would 
be prioritised for the initial data sharing arrangements.

Those areas include waste management, road safety, and natural hazards and 
emergency management – an issue that came to light during the devastating 
2019-20 summer bushfires.

Future policy areas for national data sharing may include family, domestic and 
sexual violence, Closing the Gap initiatives, and Veterans’ health, a 
communiqué from the 13 August meeting said.


Digital services ministers from around the country also agreed to four “advance 
cross-cutting initiatives” including the creation of an Australian Data 
Network, the standardisation and improvement of data to simplify its sharing, 
and using a model for aggregating de-identified data.


A spokesperson for Stuart Robert, the Minister representing the Commonwealth at 
the Data and Digital Ministers’ Meeting, said data sharing would benefit 
Australians in a number of ways.

“Responsibly, securely and seamlessly sharing data between governments is an 
efficient use of resources and will help drive economic value, innovation, 
improve services, and deliver better outcomes for Australians,” the 
spokesperson said.

“The objectives of the Intergovernmental Agreement include sharing data in the 
public interest for the purposes of informing policy decisions; designing, 
delivering, and evaluating programs; tracking implementation; and improving 
service delivery outcomes.”

More data, more problems

The Commonwealth expressed an unsated appetite for intergovernmental data 
sharing arrangements when it introduced the ill-fated Identity Matching 
Services Bill 2019.

Before it was scrapped, that bill sought to provide the government with 
capacity to build a facial recognition database using biometric information 
like state-issued drivers licences.

Its next attempt at greater access to data has been through the Data 
Availability and Transparency Bill 2020 which wants to make it easier for 
Commonwealth entities to share data between one another.

Digital rights activists are wary of the government’s data sharing ambitions, 
citing historical misuse of cross-referenced data in schemes like the 
disastrous robodebt debacle – which Stuart Robert oversaw as Minister for 
Government Services.

Lucie Krahulcova, Executive Director of Digital Rights Watch, said there was 
concern data could once again be used to create “gotcha moments” against 
citizens.

“It’s not really a voluntary relationship people are entering into,” she said.

“Government holds this information on people even if they don’t want them to in 
order to deliver these services.

“Giving people a choice to opt-out is important. We saw that with MyHealth 
record when, people are given an option [to opt-out] they’re happy to exercise 
it.”

Justin Warren, a board member of Electronic Frontiers Australia, said the kind 
of data arrangement being drummed up by Australia’s governments sits in a 
complicated legal space, as it interacts with national privacy laws that are 
currently under review and human rights legislation that varies from state to 
state.

“There’s an issue here around data being taken for one purpose – which is 
necessary to provide a government service – and then being unilaterally decided 
later that it will be used for another purpose,” Warren said.

“I think there can be a benign goodness to this data sharing. I don’t want to 
tell every government department they’ve spelt my name wrong nine times, for 
example, and there are a bunch of digital services we think are tremendous and 
use all the time.

“But the purpose of a system is what it does, and too many government agencies 
have a track record of building a system they say is for one thing but does 
another.”

State police in Queensland and Western Australia, for example, have used data 
from COVID-19 QR code check-in apps for law enforcement, not public health, 
purposes.

Government assurances

Aware of the potential for misuse – and fears that governments may be 
consolidating power through data – governments have issued assurances that the 
data sharing will only occur with the guidance of internationally-recognised 
processes and standards.

A spokesperson for the NSW Department of Customer Service – the department 
headed up by NSW’s representative at the Data and Digital Ministers’ Meeting, 
Victor Dominello – said the program “will be governed by the principles and 
associated commitments of the Data and Digital Ministers’ agreed Trust 
Principles”.

“Jurisdictions will apply the Office of the National Data Commissioner (ONDC) 
Best Practice Guide to Applying Data Sharing Principles which is based on the 
internationally recognised approach to disclosure risk management, the Five 
Safes Framework,” the spokesperson said.

The NSW government has been routinely slammed for its poor data management and 
cyber security, including a recent NSW Auditor-General’s report that found 
transport agencies had “unacceptably high” cyber risks.

Last year, Service NSW fell victim to a data breach that saw attackers access 
private information of around 104,000 people whose data was being internally 
managed and shared through email.

And for all its assurances, Warren says there is little accountability when 
government gets it wrong, as it did with the robodebt scandal.

“We would like to see, before this power is granted, discussion about what 
happens when things go wrong,” he said.

“Mistakes will happen, and we accept that, but how many mistakes should we be 
tolerating before the system is changed?

“I want to have that conversation before people are harmed, rather than five 
years later.”

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to