BIG DATA: SEIZING OPPORTUNITIES, PRESERVING VALUES

http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/big_data_privacy_report_may_1_2014.pdf

May 1, 2014

DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:

We are living in the midst of a social, economic, and technological revolution. 
How we com-municate, socialize, spend leisure time, and conduct business has 
moved onto the Internet. The Internet has in turn moved into our phones, into 
devices spreading around our homes and cities, and into the factories that 
power the industrial economy. The resulting explosion of data and discovery is 
changing our world.

In January, you asked us to conduct a 90-day study to examine how big data will 
transform the way we live and work and alter the relationships between 
government, citizens, businesses, and consumers. This review focuses on how the 
public and private sectors can maximize the bene-fits of big data while 
minimizing its risks. It also identifies opportunities for big data to grow our 
economy, improve health and education, and make our nation safer and more 
energy efficient.

While big data unquestionably increases the potential of government power to 
accrue un-checked, it also hold within it solutions that can enhance 
accountability, privacy, and the rights of citizens. Properly implemented, big 
data will become an historic driver of progress, helping our nation perpetuate 
the civic and economic dynamism that has long been its hallmark.

Big data technologies will be transformative in every sphere of life. The 
knowledge discovery they make possible raises considerable questions about how 
our framework for privacy protec-tion applies in a big data ecosystem. Big data 
also raises other concerns. A significant finding of this report is that big 
data analytics have the potential to eclipse longstanding civil rights 
protec-tions in how personal information is used in housing, credit, 
employment, health, education, and the marketplace. Americans’ relationship 
with data should expand, not diminish, their opportuni-ties and potential.

We are building the future we will inherit. The United States is better suited 
than any nation on earth to ensure the digital revolution continues to work for 
individual empowerment and social good. We are pleased to present this report’s 
recommendations on how we can embrace big data technologies while at the same 
time protecting fundamental values like privacy, fairness, and 
self-determination. We are committed to the initiatives and reforms it 
proposes. The dia-logue we set in motion today will help us remain true to our 
values even as big data reshapes the world around us.

Signed: Counselor to the President, Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of Energy, 
Director Office of Science & Technology, Policy Director National Economic 
Council

Policy Recommendations: 

This review also identifies six discrete policy recommendations that deserve 
prompt Administration attention and policy development. These are:

* Advance the Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights. The Department of Commerce 
should take appropriate consultative steps to seek stakeholder and public 
com-ment on big data developments and how they impact the Consumer Privacy Bill 
of Rights and then devise draft legislative text for consideration by 
stakeholders and submission by the President to Congress.

* Pass National Data Breach Legislation. Congress should pass legislation that 
provides for a single national data breach standard along the lines of the 
Admin-istration’s May 2011 Cybersecurity legislative proposal.

* Extend Privacy Protections to non-U.S. Persons. The Office of Management and 
Budget should work with departments and agencies to apply the Privacy Act of 
1974 to non-U.S. persons where practicable, or to establish alternative privacy 
policies that apply appropriate and meaningful protections to personal 
infor-mation regardless of a person’s nationality.

* Ensure Data Collected on Students in School is Used for Educational 
Pur-poses. The federal government must ensure that privacy regulations protect 
stu-dents against having their data being shared or used inappropriately, 
especially when the data is gathered in an educational context.

* Expand Technical Expertise to Stop Discrimination. The federal govern-ment’s 
lead civil rights and consumer protection agencies should expand their 
technical expertise to be able to identify practices and outcomes facilitated 
by big data analytics that have a discriminatory impact on protected classes, 
and devel-op a plan for investigating and resolving violations of law.

* Amend the Electronic Communications Privacy Act. Congress should amend ECPA 
to ensure the standard of protection for online, digital content is consistent 
with that afforded in the physical world—including by removing archaic 
distinctions between email left unread or over a certain age.

--
Cheers,
Stephen



                                          
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to