Big Data, Big Brother and the death of privacy in the digital age - right on

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Right On reporter Anne Devineaux traveled to Paris and Brussels to assess the impact the digital... euronews, the most watched news channel in Europe Subscribe for your daily dose of international news, curated and explained:http://eurone.ws/10ZCK4a Euronews is available in 13 other languages: http://eurone.ws/17moBCU http://www.euronews.com/2014/01/06/big-data-big-brother-and-the-death-of-privacy-in-the-digital-age Right On reporter Anne Devineaux traveled to Paris and Brussels to assess the impact the digital age is having on individual privacy, she poses a simple but potent question: "Is it still possible to protect our privacy in the digital age? Edward Snowden's revelations about the extent of US cyber surveillance has sent shockwaves across Europe. All our internet activity is monitored and stored by states and private companies." Jérémie Zimmermann is a founding member La Quadrature du Net, a group set up to protect individual privacy: "It will take a lot longer for the magnitude of these revelations to impact on our society and on our relationship with power and our relationship with technology." For months the scandal surrounding the Prism program has raged. Under the guise of anti-terrorism the National Security Agency (NSA) collected, via the US net giants, the personal data of millions of citizens worldwide, a massive, menacing and indiscriminate collection. Beyond the diplomatic fallout the revelations have opened up a debate on the major issue of our time. The mass production of data via the net, known as Big Data, for Big Data read Big Brother. Jérémie Zimmermann, is concerned by the power the main US net players hold: "Their technological and economic models are based on the maximum data collection globally. This centralisation of data forms the pillar of mass surveillance." However, alternatives do exist say activists. One example is the search engine DuckDuckGo, which does not store personal information. A vital component is a change in attitudes. Activists reject the misleading trend of the split between the computer masters and the ordinary world. Jérémie Zimmermann, from La Quadrature du Net: "On the one hand hand there is the product that comes in a box, it is easy, simple, user friendly and the other stuff in white letters on black screen, stuff you are not expected to understand. There is the technology you control and the technology you have the potential to control. This has to be studied, learned. I'm convinced that in the 21st Century not knowing where one's data is or ignorance of the architecture of the communication system will be akin to illiteracy. We will be signing contracts we cannot read and don't understand." In Europe the protection of privacy is considered a fundamental right. In each country a public authority is responsible for protecting it. In France it is CNIL, the Commission Nationale Informatique et Liberté. Its president refuses to accept the scandal is a failure of the national supervisory authorities. She is calling for a clear political and legal response at a European level. Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin is the President of French Data Protection Authority (CNIL): "If there was a failure, it was that Europe didn't react quickly to the Prism case. So I think it will kick start negotiations to formulate a new legal framework to develop a business policy on these issues across Europe. And for a framework for cooperation between intelligence services between Europe and the United States, which does not exist as we speak." Anne Devineaux says the formulation of EU legislation to protect individual privacy in the digital age is easier said than done: "Here in Brussels the battle has raged for three years around the reform of EU legislation on data protection. It is a long and complex battle with lobbying from the US net giants particularly intense." The right to be forgotten, the explicit consent of users, data processing, the subjects are many and varied. The aim is to create a clear legislative framework across the EU. At the end of October a draft was finally approved by a committee of the European parliament, suffice to say talks are ongoing between the Commission and member states. As representatives of the US net industry fight to avoid restrictive regulations, others such as EDRI, a Brussels-based organisation, battle to defend privacy. Find us on: Youtube http://bit.ly/zr3upY Facebook http://www.facebook.com/euronews.fans Twitter http://twitter.com/euronews

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