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Europe

The Irish government wants to make Big Tech privacy cases more confidential, and civil liberties advocates are furious

By
David Meyer
David Meyer
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By
David Meyer
David Meyer
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June 26, 2023, 12:53 PM ET
Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in Dublin, April 2019.
Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in Dublin, April 2019. Artur Widak—NurPhoto/Getty Images

European privacy advocates are hopping mad at what they see as an attempt by the Irish government to draw a veil over the activities of the country’s data protection authority—which has jurisdiction over many of Big Tech’s activities in the European Union, and which has been heavily criticized for failing to crack down on the likes of Meta fast or hard enough.

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Last year, the Irish government proposed a rather innocuous piece of legislation called—please stay awake—the Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2022. Having passed through most of the legislative process, the bill will see its final debate in Ireland’s lower house of parliament on Wednesday, but last week the government dropped in a last-minute amendment, triggering a row that broke out today.

The change would allow the Data Protection Commission (DPC) to declare as confidential the information it gives complainants and companies about its investigations and handling of privacy complaints. Those people and companies would then be banned from making that information public while the DPC does its work. (You can find the details starting on page 7 here.)

The activist lawyer Max Schrems has had many public clashes with the DPC over its handling of his hugely consequential complaints about Meta—he’s the reason Facebook and Insta may soon have to pull out of Europe. Schrems and other privacy advocates say they’re the intended targets of this change, and claim journalists would also be caught in the fallout. 

“You cannot criticize an authority or big tech companies if you are not allowed to say what’s going on in a procedure. By declaring every tiny [piece of] information ‘confidential’ they try to hinder public discourse and reporting,” Schrems said in a statement this morning. He told me that, had this law been in place over recent years, he would have been unable to tell the public about the DPC and Meta holding “10 meetings on how to bypass the GDPR” (the DPC strongly disputes that such meetings took place.)

The Irish Council for Civil Liberties also weighed in this morning, saying the DPC should be “holding public GDPR hearings” but the Irish government was instead “attempting to make DPC decision-making even more opaque.”

Irish data protection lawyer Simon McGarr wrote on Twitter that the amendment would block people involved in DPC complaint procedures from “alerting the public or speaking out,” and would “further undermine the DPC[’s] effectiveness and reputation.” The U.K.-based tech law professor Lilian Edwards called it “a simple license for total secrecy.”

Not so, insists the Irish Department of Justice, which added the last-minute amendment to the bill. The government line is that the change would “bolster the integrity” of DPC investigations, and people are misinterpreting it. 

“Breaches of confidentiality during an investigation can undermine the ability to effectively regulate data processors and allow breaches to go unsanctioned,” said spokeswoman Rachel Breen in an emailed statement. (I then asked for an example of this happening, but have not yet received a response.) Breen also noted that the confidentiality provision would only apply during the DPC’s procedures—once an investigation is closed, all those details would then come out—and said the department had indicated last October and November that it would be making changes to the Irish Data Protection Act’s confidentiality provisions. 

And no, the change “does not impact on media reporting,” Breen added.

This is clearly a complicated and nuanced matter, so introducing the amendment so late in the game does seem counterproductive at best. It seems clear that the new confidentiality rule would make life easier for the Big Tech companies that bring so many jobs and tax euros to Ireland—they and the Irish regulator would be shielded from their adversaries’ running commentary as cases progress. Whether the change would be good for efforts to hold those firms accountable is another matter.

(P.S. Our third quarterly Coins2Day @ Work playbook just dropped today, and it’s all about generative A.I. In the workplace. Check it out here!)

More news below.

Want to send thoughts or suggestions to Data Sheet? Drop a line here.

David Meyer

Data Sheet’s daily news section was written and curated by Andrea Guzman.

NEWSWORTHY

5G wireless signals could prove to be a factor in future flight delays. U.S. Planes that haven’t been upgraded to resist interference from new 5G wireless signals may not be allowed to land in some low-visibility conditions, Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg says. Airlines have faced a July 1 deadline to make upgrades to their fleets since early 2022, when wireless companies agreed to delay the expansion of 5G near major U.S. Airports until then. More than 80% of domestic planes can now fly without interference, but Delta, an outlier, has almost 200 planes that won’t be ready in time since the airline says it faced supply-chain issues. Buttigieg’s message comes ahead of the July Fourth weekend, when millions are expected to travel by plane.

Twitter saw warning signs ahead of Jan. 6. Twitter’s safety policy team met the day before the U.S. Capitol attack, and participants pushed the company to have moderators remove threatening messages like “locked and loaded,” according to a video obtained by the Washington Post. But a senior manager said executives wanted measures taken only against the most blatant violations. Other records viewed by the Post revealed that Twitter’s leaders were reluctant to take action against Donald Trump’s account two days after the insurrection, but he was ultimately suspended, a move that was reversed late last year at the direction of Elon Musk. Other social platforms have enacted similar moderation standards. Meta ended Trump’s account suspension, and at YouTube, videos that falsely claim the 2020 election was stolen won’t be removed since the company thinks it could limit speech without reducing the risk of violence.

A step in the White House’s $40 billion plan for broadband funding. States are learning today the amount they’ve been allocated to carry out broadband expansion as part of the Biden administration’s goal of having everyone in the U.S. Access high-speed internet by 2030. The Verge reports that each state is getting at least $100 million, with amounts varying based on need; states can submit plans for using the funding by December. From there, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration will then approve the plans before next spring. This comes after an NTIA announcement earlier this month that it would invest in 35 “middle-mile” broadband construction projects, which connect large fiber networks to local networks.

ON OUR FEED

“Stop Banning Us”

—The message on signs that tribute act performers will hold this week as they gather outside Meta’s new building at King’s Cross in London to protest Meta’s recently installed rules against the Facebook and Instagram accounts of anyone who could be described as “impersonating someone else.” The protesters will include those who impersonate Taylor Swift, Freddie Mercury, Britney Spears, and a singer who says Dolly Parton herself has given permission for the performances.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Marc Andreessen says we’re in a ‘freeze-frame moment’ with A.I.—and has advice for young people, by Steve Mollman

A messaging app startup that raised $200M from SoftBank and others is shutting down because 95% of its users were fake, by Steve Mollman

One way to avoid losing your job to A.I.: Ensuring your personal brand doesn’t get ‘dusty,’ says DKNY’s former PR exec, by Jane Thier

Humiliated lawyers fined $5,000 for submitting ChatGPT hallucinations in court: ‘I heard about this new site, which I falsely assumed was, like, a super search engine,’ by Rachel Shin

YouTube’s richest creator, MrBeast, says he declined a spot on the doomed Titan sub dive: ‘Kind of scary that I could have been on it,’ by Chloe Taylor

BEFORE YOU GO

NASA is trying to communicate with its spacecraft. NASA engineers are developing a ChatGPT-style interface that could allow astronauts to talk to their spacecraft and mission controllers. That way, they’d be able to communicate with A.I.-powered robots exploring space. Early versions of it will be deployed on Lunar Gateway, a space station that’s part of the Artemis program, the Guardian reports.

Larissa Suzuki, a visiting researcher at NASA and a technical director at Google, envisions an interplanetary communications network with A.I. Built in that can address glitches and other problems. She is also looking at how to deploy machine learning in space through a method referred to as federated learning. Someday, it could help robotic rovers share information about water or minerals on other planets. “It’s a technique to do distributed learning—to learn in a collaborative way without…bringing all that data to the ground,” she told the newspaper.

This is the web version of Data Sheet, a daily newsletter on the business of tech. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

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