Foundation for Information Policy Research
@fipr-policy.bsky.social
9 followers 19 following 7 posts
The Foundation for Information Policy Research is a an independent network of academics, journalists, and experts that studies the interaction between information technology and society. www.fipr.org
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fipr-policy.bsky.social
Systems like this need real institutional legitimacy to work.
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privacyinternational.org
Governments and industry are building ID systems to support their needs to administer, govern - and profit.

In turn, these systems are being used to facilitate targeting, profiling and surveillance.

Learn more about our approach to identity: privacyinternational.org/learn/identity
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privacyinternational.org
The PM mentioned taking inspiration from systems in Estonia and India.

Our research on the ID systems in both countries has documented a lack of transparency around data processing, and the high risks to people’s safety and dignity.

privacyinternational.org/long-read/46...
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privacyinternational.org
The UK Prime Minister has announced plans for a new mandatory digital ID scheme for anyone who wants to work in the UK.

The initiative is being pitched as a way to control borders - we fail to see how the two are linked.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cw...
fipr-policy.bsky.social
The other countries where this kind of digital ID has been implemented are far smaller, and don’t have our appalling track record of expensive government IT disasters.
fipr-policy.bsky.social
There are absolutely real cybersecurity risks as well - not least, from the people with legitimate access to the system. For example, every year more than half of the prosecutions under the Computer Misuse Act are of serving police officers caught misusing their access to police databases.
fipr-policy.bsky.social
Linking together all these different government systems and databases and tying them to a single point of truth about you - the obsession of the Tony Blair Institute - is going to be incredibly complicated, and is a disaster waiting to happen.
fipr-policy.bsky.social
This isn’t just about ID - most people have some form of ID, and digital ID systems can be designed well and preserve our privacy and basic rights. It’s about the particular design of this system and what they want to achieve with it.
fipr-policy.bsky.social
Has this all be throught through. In short, this has all the makings of another fiasco like the Post Office scandal. People will be wrongly denied access to basic services, employment, and other aspects of day to day life when this all breaks down.
fipr-policy.bsky.social
On the BritCard - in theory better government systems are a great idea, but implementing it requires very high levels of management competence to cope with the ambition and complexity; the costs will correspondingly be very high.
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privacyinternational.org
Don’t want your phone to know where you’ve been? 🤫

We have a guide for that…

privacyinternational.org/guide-step/5...
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privacyinternational.org
⏰ UPDATE: The US Government is not happy with the UK Government's secret surveillance orders

privacyinternational.org/news-analysi...
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susansegfault.bsky.social
The government would be sensible to step back and retract this notice, and instead focus on the important work of renewing the UK’s basic infrastructure, digital security, and privacy protections."
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susansegfault.bsky.social
Law enforcement have much more effective tactics - ones which don’t involve undermining our shared security - to investigate and disrupt serious criminal activity where encryption is being used.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
As the UK government’s own guidance for companies and the public makes clear, strong encryption is at the heart of keeping the services we all use safe and secure. There is no way to undermine encryption which doesn’t leave huge weaknesses that criminals and hostile state actors can exploit.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
Our basic human rights and democratic freedoms rely on security, privacy, and the accountability of our institutions. Tactics like issuing encryption removal orders to tech companies will only make every iPhone user in the UK less secure.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
My comment on behalf of FIPR: “It’s not surprising that the Home Office’s attempt to compel Apple to undermine the security of their products is facing resistance from the US Government. The UK Government’s order would effectively ban Apple from telling the US Congress what they had been asked to do
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susansegfault.bsky.social
We explain the key issues behind the case, arguing that this fundamentally breaks security and privacy for Apple's users, and outlining some of the many alternatives which law enforcement have to these backdoors.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
It has been the source of significant controversy, with the US Government pushing back against the order and making it an issue in ongoing trade negotiations between the US and UK.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
This order - initially made in secret and which Apple is not allowed to discuss even with the US Congress - effectively requires Apple to build a backdoor into its encrypted systems.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
It emerged earlier this year that the Home Office has issued a TCN to Apple. This notice requires Apple to make technical changes to its Advanced Data Protection service, which provides users with secure encrypted storage, to allow the UK Government to access encrypted user data on request.
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susansegfault.bsky.social
The Foundation for Information Policy Research is today publishing a policy explainer of the ongoing case between Apple and the Home Office, in which we outline the issues and our views on them as experts in law, cryptography, policy, security, and criminology. You can find it here: www.fipr.org