EFF: A Bill of Privacy Rights for Social Network Users

Die Electronic Frontier Foundation diskutiert im Moment eine „Bill of Privacy Rights for Social Network Users“. Bisher gibt es wohl drei Punkte, die essentiell sind:

#1: The Right to Informed Decision-Making

Users should have the right to a clear user interface that allows them to make informed choices about who sees their data and how it is used. Users should be able to see readily who is entitled to access any particular piece of information about them, including other people, government officials, websites, applications, advertisers and advertising networks and services. Whenever possible, a social network service should give users notice when the government or a private party uses legal or administrative processes to seek information about them, so that users have a meaningful opportunity to respond.

#2: The Right to Control

Social network services must ensure that users retain control over the use and disclosure of their data. A social network service should take only a limited license to use data for the purpose for which it was originally given to the provider. When the service wants to make a secondary use of the data, it must obtain explicit opt-in permission from the user. The right to control includes users‘ right to decide whether their friends may authorize the service to disclose their personal information to third-party websites and applications.

Social network services must ask their users‘ permission before making any change that could share new data about users, share users‘ data with new categories of people, or use that data in a new way. Changes like this should be „opt-in“ by default, not „opt-out,“ meaning that users‘ data is not shared unless a user makes an informed decision to share it. If a social network service is adding some functionality that its users really want, then it should not have to resort to unclear or misleading interfaces to get people to use it.

#3: The Right to Leave

Users giveth, and users should have the right to taketh away.

One of the most basic ways that users can protect their privacy is by leaving a social network service that does not sufficiently protect it. Therefore, a user should have the right to delete data or her entire account from a social network service. And we mean really delete. It is not enough for a service to disable access to data while continuing to store or use it. It should be permanently eliminated from the service’s servers.

Furthermore, if users decide to leave a social network service, they should be able to easily, efficiently and freely take their uploaded information away from that service and move it to a different one in a usable format. This concept, known as „data portability“ or „data liberation,“ is fundamental to promote competition and ensure that users truly maintains control over their information, even if they sever their relationship with a particular service.

Deine Spende für digitale Freiheitsrechte

Wir berichten über aktuelle netzpolitische Entwicklungen, decken Skandale auf und stoßen Debatten an. Dabei sind wir vollkommen unabhängig. Denn unser Kampf für digitale Freiheitsrechte finanziert sich zu fast 100 Prozent aus den Spenden unserer Leser:innen.

2 Ergänzungen

  1. Hallo,

    ich gehöre zum eYouGuide Team der EU Kommission und bei der Suche nach relevanten Infos zum Thema online Schutz in sozialen Netzwerken und von Minderjährigen bin ich auf Ihren sehr interessanten Artikel gestoßen.
    Im Zusammenhang hiermit dachte ich, es könnte Sie bzw. Ihre Leser eventuell interessieren, dass die EU Kommission eine eigene Webseite auch auf deutsch zum Thema hat.

    Hier der Link: http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/eyouguide/navigation/index_de.htm

    Beste Grüße,

    Alex
    eYouGuide Team

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