Abstract

This presentation to the UN Special Rapporteur’s conference on the Right to Privacy Session: ‘COVID-19 and Privacy in Asia, Australasia and Europe’ was given on 23 June 2021. Graham Greenleaf presented this second part, and Katharine Kemp presented a first part.Three forms of COVID data surveillance are considered: Proximity Tracking; Attendance Tracking; and COVID Status Certification. Our argument is that legislative protections based on common principles are needed for all types of COVID surveillance. Our starting point is that emergency measures pose risks requiring emergency-quality protections. Unfortunately, emergencies tend to reduce normal legislative oversight. We consider two desirable principles which are often difficult to deliver if maximum effectiveness against COVID is sought: no compulsion (voluntary); and no central database. We use three points of comparison to illustrate the legislative protections needed (and in some cases, absent):1. Australia’s bluetooth proximity tracing app (COVIDSafe Act)2. Australian QR Codes for attendance check-ins (no model law)3. EU’s COVID status certificates (EU Digital Covid Certificate Regulations)We argue for 10 common principles which can and should be implemented in legislation applying to all types of COVID surveillance systems:1. Put controls within the country’s data privacy law2. Guarantee access to avoid discrimination3. Minimise & define authorised uses of COVID data4. Minimise data collection5. Anti-coercion provisions6. Prevent ‘surveillance creep’ 7. Continuous deletion program (if data is collected)8. ‘Sunset clause’ for whole system9. Supervision by independent DPA10. Transparency These 10 principles are applicable even where COVID surveillance systems are developed which are compulsory and involve centralised databases. Various international organisations are advocating similar sets of principles.The presentation examines the application of these ten principles in relation to each of the three examples of legislative protections (or their absence), and concludes that essentially the same legislative controls are necessary & possible to mediate all three types of COVID surveillance.

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