Privacy Paradigm – Towards a Creative Commons for Privacy
I’ve recently given two presentations about the internet and privacy, the first a fortnight ago in UCD at the Student Legal Convention, and the second last week in WIT. My theme, both times, was the decline of privacy online, and what we can do about it, not only from regulation by Data Protection Commissioners to individual court cases, but also from protecting our own privacy to respecting the privacy of others. In the latter context, I called for a Creative Commons for Privacy and I suggested that it might be called Privacy Paradigm (but if you have a better idea, please let me know). In this post, I want to tease out what a Privacy Paradigm, a Creative Commons for Privacy, might look like and what it could do.
If the analogy is to Creative Commons, the first question must be: what does Creative Commons do? Have a look at the column on the right, and scroll down a bit to the box headed “Licence”. You’ll see a badge with three icons and some short-hand; and you’ll see accompanying text which explains that this blog is “licensed under a Creative Commons … License”. By these means, I signal not only that you may re-use my content, but also the conditions under which you may do so.…