Framework aims to embed privacy culture in Australian organisations

Summary:Australian Information Commissioner Timothy Pilgrim is encouraging 
organisations to embed sound privacy practice into their operations with the 
release of a new privacy management framework.

By Leon Spencer | May 4, 2015  
http://www.zdnet.com/article/framework-aims-to-embed-privacy-culture-in-australian-organisations/

The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has launched a new 
privacy management framework in a bid to encourage organisations to embed sound 
privacy practice into their operations.

The new framework, which was launched on Monday to coincide with Privacy 
Awareness Week (PAW) 2015, outlines four steps that the OAIC wants 
organisations to employ in order to ensure good privacy governance: Embed a 
culture of privacy enabling compliance; establish robust and effective privacy 
processes; evaluate privacy processes for continued effectiveness; and enhance 
responses to privacy issues.

http://www.oaic.gov.au/privacy/privacy-resources/privacy-guides/privacy-management-framework

It comes just over a year after reforms to Australia's privacy laws came into 
effect in March 2014, with the changes applying to Australian government 
agencies, private sector businesses, and not-for-profit organisations covered 
by the Privacy Act 1988.

With the reforms came the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), which replaced 
the National Privacy Principles and Information Privacy Principles, and apply 
to organisations and Australian government agencies.

In an assessment of the online privacy policies of 20 organisations operating 
in Australia, including Twitter, Microsoft, Instagram, and Westpac, the OAIC 
revealed that 55 percent of the organisations' policies did not meet one or 
more of the basic content requirements under APP 1, which requires 
organisations and agencies to have a privacy policy that is clearly expressed 
and up to date.

While all the policies assessed adequately described the kinds of personal 
information they collect and how it is collected, some did not outline how 
personal information could be accessed and corrected, said the OAIC.

However, all 20 organisations had privacy policies that were easy to find on 
their websites, and all privacy policies adequately described the kinds of 
personal information each organisation collects and how it is collected, the 
OAIC said.

The release of the new framework sees the OAIC move to shift its focus away 
from law reform implementation to a broader strategic view, and ongoing privacy 
awareness and enforcement.

Australian Information Commissioner Timothy Pilgrim, who spoke at the PAW event 
launching the new framework in Sydney on Monday, said that embedding good 
privacy practice into daily business processes would help organisations respond 
to change and implement best privacy practice.

"I expect all organisations that have responsibilities under the Privacy Act to 
make a commitment to implement this framework," said Pilgrim. "This will put 
organisations in the best position to address privacy challenges head on, meet 
their obligations under the Act, and ultimately get ahead of the game."

While Pilgrim hopes the new framework will help both government and 
non-government sectors in Australia to develop best practice information 
privacy cultures within organisations, the head of policy for Facebook in 
Australia and New Zealand Mia Garlick said that the social network looks to 
Europe for its privacy policy guidance.

"It's very hard for us to segment the product based on jurisdiction, so we 
really need to want to encourage a global perspective on policy," said Garlick, 
who spoke at the PAW business breakfast. "For us, we adopt a European standard 
of privacy ... and we try to apply that as much as we can across the world."

However, Garlick revealed that this approach was not a perfect fix, with 
Facebook having to turn off some information-gathering features of its service 
in certain regions.

"The ideal is that there is one global standard, but sometimes that is just not 
possible," she said.

Additionally, Mark Burdon from TC Beirne School of Law at the University of 
Queensland suggested that Australia needs to compile a deeper reservoir of 
legal rulings around information privacy issues from which policy makers and 
organisations alike can draw legal guidance.

"One of the difficulties that we have in Australia is that we just don't have 
enough jurisprudence," said Burdon. "We need more cases to get to the courts so 
the courts can consider the kinds of issues.

"We haven't really had that deep sense from a jurisprudential perspective of 
what is personal information, and more importantly what should be personal 
information," he said.

According to new research by professional services firm Deloitte, the majority 
(67 percent) of Australians consider their credit card details to be the 
personal information they are most concerned about being subject to an 
information breach.

Deloitte Australia's inaugural Australian Privacy Index, also launched on 
Monday to coincide with PAW 2015, revealed that other major sources of breach 
concern for Australian consumers were passport numbers (46 percent) and driver 
licence numbers (43 percent).

The study, which was informed by more than 1,000 surveyed individuals, also 
found that the banking and finance, and government sectors were the top two 
most trusted industry areas by consumers when it comes to safeguarding personal 
information.

The study suggested that transparency played a key role in how trustworthy an 
industry sector appears to consumers, with the media, telecommunications, and 
travel and transport sectors claiming the bottom three places in the overall 
Privacy Index 2015 ranking, which rated 11 industries in total.

Curiously, social media ranked third, just below banking and finance, with 
Deloitte suggesting that the industry's minimal use of third-party cookies 
compared to other industries such as retail, and its moves towards greater 
transparency, helped to buoy its place on the list.

This comes despite social media and the telecommunications sectors collectively 
accounting for 58 percent of the consumer complaints regarding privacy.

Another unexpected result from the study was the discovery that good data 
breach disclosure practices resulted in over a third (34 percent) of 
respondents claiming to have more trust in the organisations that had 
experienced a breach of personal information, rather than less.

"It is critical that as organisations derive benefit from personal information, 
the consumer is kept informed about the use and any changes to their data," 
said Cyber Risk Services director and key author of the inaugural Deloitte 
Australian Privacy Index Gavin Cartwright.


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

Reply via email to