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果冻影院 Faculty of Laws host groundbreaking two-day course on privacy

30 January 2017

Privacy Laws

果冻影院 Faculty of Laws and听果冻影院鈥檚 Institute of Brand and Innovation Law听organised a two-day course on privacy called听on Monday 23 and Tuesday 24 January 2017.

This event was an opportunity for lawyers and policymakers to consider the state of the current privacy landscape after the Investigatory Powers Bill was passed by Parliament. The Investigatory Powers Bill has been condemned by judges, QCs, law professors, senior lawyers and computer scientists and supported by a 100,000 signature petition of objection. In December its legality was called into question by the CJEU.

The speakers, who include internationally respected lawyers from both the UK and the USA, former government employees, the current director of Europol and experts in international data protection, security, computer science and cryptography, considered a vast array of topics such as freedom of expression, surveillance, national security and the law and ethics of leaking.

Keynote speaker, Rob Wainwright, Director of Europe鈥檚 Law Enforcement Agency, EUROPOL, began by outlining听Europol鈥檚 remit and trans-national work. After a听chilling tour of the dark side of the Internet he discussed the tension between privacy and law enforcement. Rob Wainwright was optimistic at society鈥檚 ability to develop a set of legal instruments that deliver privacy in a balanced and proportional way. He welcomed the improved openness in the law enforcement community post-Snowden and argued that there is a special responsibility in respect of data held about private citizens to improve trust between citizen and state.

Rob Wainwright saluted the powers and independence, for example, of the Europol鈥檚 data protection body that has access to 100% of Europol鈥檚 data. Revealing he had been described as 鈥渁 despotic agent of digital repression鈥 he firmly advocated online privacy as a fundamental right, and did not support the wholesale banning of encryption or any requirement for back door vulnerabilities. While welcoming improved co-operation between tech companies and his agency he was of the view that there was room for improvement beyond the limited circumstances where the interests of law enforcement and the technology companies were aligned.

Read more about the event.