NEWS & FEATURES Info highway makes privacy unlikely Advancing technology fuels fear of totalitarian abuse (CUP) AVE YOU EVER FILED A TAX RETURN? THEN u're in Revenue Canada’s Taxpayer Master File. plied for a passport? You're in the computer emory of External Affairs. Participated in a monstration? You may be among the 54,000 untersubversion files in the Canadian Security relligence Service (CSIS). Big Brother has arrived. And he’s a microchip. From Statistics Canada to the Ministry of Human sources, the estimated 2700 data banks of personal ormation run by 160 federal agencies contain proximately 12 dossiers on every Canadian man, oman, and child, raising the concerns that in the mputer age, the individual’s right to privacy has come a thing of the past. “These files contain your address, telephone mber, Social Insurance Number, where you ark, how long you've been working there, how ich you make, whether you’re married or single, at charities you contribute to,” said Shelley kson, Director of Public Affairs at the Privacy mmission in Ottawa. “If you start to look at the tails contained in all the separate files, the vernment knows quite a bit about you.” Given that personal information has become a ikibillion dollar global business, critics warn the ht to privacy will be relegated to horse and buggy tus on the coming superhighway. “The next technology that we haven’t got a hold isthe information superhighway, the convergence all these systems,” said Jackson. “The whole pose of it is the transmission of information, and course it will transport personal information. € problem is that it’s going to be a shared work. Government has privacy legislation and siness doesn’t. It’s basically a free-for-all.” Though the information highway is billed as a isumer’s dream, its implications in terms of ividual privacy are distinctly Orwellian. “The main concerns are information nipulation, information being used for purposes >ut which you know nothing, or people assembling Charlottetown's 1st Montreal Styled Deli! FEATURING: “Montreal Smoked Meat Sandwich “Fairmount Bagels (Quebec's oldest bagel bakery) aa Ms Hotitte Coffees and Teas leats, Cheeses & Salads inte en eet Si "Homemade Soup Specials “Home of the i “OPEN 7:00 AM - 7:00 PM* Eat-In or Take-Out Non-Smoking Environment eee profiles on you,” said Jackson. “And because it’s an electronic system, it’s all done without your knowledge or consent.” One concern is the phenomenon of data matching, in which personal information in various two largest in Canada each possessing approximately 23 million files on Canadian citizens. “The reports | have suggest credit bureau records are notoriously erroneous, cantoning incorrect information,” sad Foran. “This can lead to an inability to get a loan, a mortgage, a job. The possibilities in having an erroneous record, which is transferred to a number of other data bases, poses a risk for people.” Although the credit agencies guarantee the right of an individual to review his or her personal file, Foran identified two weaknesses in the system. “The theory is that you can check the accuracy of the information on your file,” he said. “But not a lot of people check their records, and if they do they would need an interpreter to decode their credit file. The other problem that occurs is that credit bureau information is information they’ve collected from other sources. They don’t take any ownership responsibility for the records they keep.” Such “records” may range from comments on elementary school report cards to the reports of hired private investigators. But often, said Foran, we give up this information voluntarily. “Look at a VISA application,” he said. “You may not realize it, but you've signed a pretty broad waiver of any privacy rights. You've said to them, you can use this information for whatever purpose you want, and | can’t control it. You have no idea what the uses and disclosures of such information are.” Another diligent record keeper is the RCMP, whose Canadian police Information Centre (CPIC) contains files on 10 per cent of the Canadian adult population. CPIC and its American counterpart, the NCIC system, havebeen criticized for recording -Above Cedar’s Eatery - 81 University Ave. arrests as well as convictions, for occasionally omitting case developments (such as acquittals or dropped charges), and for not monitoring the further dissemination of the data they provide. In the case of Michael DuCross, a native Canadian, incorrect information on his computer file led to his wrongful arrest and detention in a U.S. Marine prison. He was released five months later after the error was discovered. ~ Police files also raise questions about trans- border data flow. Because of agreements with Interpol and the FBI (whose computer contains dossiers on eight million Americans, andis accessible to 64,000 police agencies nationally), detailed information on Canadian citizens is often transmitted internationally, thus falling outside of Canada’s privacy jurisdictions. Sizeable dossiers on individuals can also be accumulated by methods of surveillance. The National Security Agency in the US, for instance, has the computing ability to interpret and analyze 70 per cent of all the telephone, telex, data and radio transmission generated on the planet. The technological capabilities of the totalitarian government of George Orwell's 1984 are essentially already in effect. ABUSING INFORMATION examination of privacy rights: “The chilling effect of pervasive surveillance will inevitably destroy any society’s capacity for dissent, non-conformity and heterodoxy. Subtract these elements from a libertarian democracy and you have totalitarianism.” A frightening picture was painted by George Fierheller, chairman of TAC, an organization which recently held a conference in Toronto to discuss the ramifications of the information superhighway. “The concerns are not as much about what is happening as about what may happen,” he said. “When you run into huge computers, it opens up more and more possibilities for abuse.” Such abuse includes information being stolen, as in the 1986 theft of Revenue Canada microfiches, containing personal data on 17 million taxpayers; mishandled, as when the Canada Employment Centre in Sarnia Ont., mistakenly faxed detailed data on four individuals to the local newspaper; or studied, as in Sweden, where for 20 years sociologists examined 15,000 people without their consent, by probing government files. Given these dangers, Fierheller says the handling of personal information should be guided by certain principles. “People should be able to determine what information is there,” he said. “Secondly, they should be able to check what is there, and thirdly there should bean ombudsman to go to if you think provisions to defeat them.” The Canadian situation is at least superior to that of the US, where the government possesses four billion files on citizens, and where 84 per cent of federal data banks have no legal mandate to collect the information in their possession. But, wrote Phillips, concerns about the efficacy of Canadian privacy protection remain. “A society which casually accepts the existence of dossiers of unknown accuracy on millions of individuals,and with no right of access or correction, is a society which is recklessly indifferent to preserving that most basic privacy right: the right to some control over what others knowabut you. Yet this is the situation as it now stands.” The fear remains that with present computing abilities, the desires of business and government for personal information will go unchecked. As the head of a New York City investigative firm said: “Privacy is an absolute myth. When you're born, the first thing they do is take a footprint and fill out a birth certificate. You go to a doctor, they keep medical records. You go to work, you buy a car or a house, there are more records. Your life is continuously open.” Farmer's Market Beadwork By Holly Handmade Jewelery Repairs — Custom Orders T-4bints - Natwe Crafts - Dream Catchers 10% off students, staff. faculty Home 892-6269 _Charlottetown Mall Flea Market-Sundays [ x.press march twenty-second 1994 page 3 | Oyen ,