Best Practices for Data Protection and Privacy: Difference between revisions
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==Categorization== | ==Categorization== | ||
*Issues: [[Information Sharing/Disclosure]] | *Issues: [[Information Sharing/Disclosure]]; [[Regulation/Liability]]; [[Privacy]] | ||
==Key Words== | ==Key Words== | ||
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“Privacy” in the commercial context is less about confidentiality or secrecy than it is about fair information | “Privacy” in the commercial context is less about confidentiality or secrecy than it is about fair information | ||
practices and how an organization is using information to make decisions about and transacting with other | practices and how an organization is using information to make decisions about and transacting with other | ||
people. | people. This chapter provides an overview of the existing laws that address privacy considerations affecting businesses, particularly those laws that concern the collection, use, access, distribution, and sharing of | ||
certain personal information of individuals. | certain personal information of individuals. | ||
==Additional Notes and Highlights== | ==Additional Notes and Highlights== | ||
Latest revision as of 09:23, 17 June 2010
Full Title of Reference
Best Practices for Data Protection and Privacy
Full Citation
Alison A. Besunder, "Assisting Business Clients with Key Data Protection and Privacy Considerations" (2009) in Best Practices for Data Protection and Privacy: Leading Lawyers on Creating a Data Protection Strategy, Dealing with Security Breaches, and Analyzing Recent Trends in Legislation (Aspatore Books, 2009). Buy Book
Categorization
Key Words
Synopsis
What is “privacy”? Americans tend to think of the concept as “fundamental,” but few could appropriately define it if asked. A current discussion of “privacy” really focuses on the area of “information privacy”--in short, the right to control information about one's self. The irony inherent in the concept of this definition is that, as a legal matter, individuals do not “own” their personal information. Rather, the “ownership” interest (if any) in the intangible property of an individual's information itself resides in the individual or entity that is collecting, disseminating, and using that information. “Privacy” in the commercial context is less about confidentiality or secrecy than it is about fair information practices and how an organization is using information to make decisions about and transacting with other people. This chapter provides an overview of the existing laws that address privacy considerations affecting businesses, particularly those laws that concern the collection, use, access, distribution, and sharing of certain personal information of individuals.