Has our right to privacy been forgotten?

Has our right to privacy been forgotten?
The spooks and Google are pressuring our privacy from opposite directions

Has our right to privacy been forgotten? It sometimes seems so. Theresa May and other authoritarians seem to want to ensure that everything is remembered, whilst Google often seem aggrieved that it should be possible for anything to be forgotten. Our privacy - our privacy rights - seem to be the only thing that is forgotten.

And yet, right now, both Google and what might loosely be called the intelligence community are (at least at the surface level) consulting over how best to take privacy into account. Both, however, are doing so very much on their own terms, and the level to which they are really "consulting" with the people needs to be taken with a pinch of salt.

For Google, the main current issue is the misleadingly named "right to be forgotten," insofar as that right emerged from the ruling of the European Court of Justice ruling in the Google Spain case. Google's reaction to the ruling has been swift but far from uncontested. Indeed, many have suggested that Google has been deliberately overreacting in order to make it look as though the ruling is absurd, authoritarian or unworkable - or even all three.

Stories of what look like obviously inappropriate delistings have been appearing in the press - criminals hiding their crimes and so forth. Journalists have been outraged that their stories can apparently no longer be found - though very often the stories about these delisted stories are not quite to be what they seem.

What's more, now that Google has released data about the kinds of URLs that have been delisted, it really doesn't look as though journalistic stories are the main point. Top of the list of sites for which URLs have been removed is Facebook, whilst second is profileengine.com, a site which among other things archives old social media profiles, including Facebook profiles which the users believe they have actually deleted.

Given that one of the drivers of the original idea of a right to be forgotten on the internet, as pushed by European Commissioner Viviane Reding in 2010, was how difficult it was to delete your social media accounts, it looks on the face of it as though it might actually be working.

Parallel to these, in more ways than one, the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament - the body with oversight over MI5, MI6 and GCHQ - has been running its own Privacy and Security Inquiry, and after taking written evidence early this year, has begun its own hearings: both formal hearings with some That, however, is not how it appears in the press, and neither, on the surface, is it how Google seems to want it to appear - and why their own consultative process is well under way.

Squeezed on both sides

The European tour of the Advisory Council to Google on the Right to be Forgotten rumbled into London this week, with a public meeting on the October 16. It's the sixth of seven meetings: it's already been to Madrid, Rome, Paris, Warsaw and Berlin, and after London it will finish the tour, appropriately enough, in Brussels. The hearings have been precisely set up, orchestrated even. The Advisory Council was carefully selected, as, it appears, have been the speakers at the meetings and the terms upon which they speak. It is easy, however, to be too cynical about this - it might be that Google is genuinely trying to find an appropriate balance here. Only time will tell.

Parallel to these, in more ways than one, the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament - the body with oversight over MI5, MI6 and GCHQ - has been running its own Privacy and Security Inquiry, and after taking written evidence early this year, has begun its own hearings: both formal hearings with some witnesses and 'round table discussions' with others. Though on the surface very different, there are some strong similarities. Carefully selected committees, supposedly independent of the bodies about which they report, taking evidence from a screened set of experts, on terms set out by the committees, with purely advisory capabilities - and the distinct sense that there's an overall unspoken agenda.