tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6974997875021040765.post1433865166711739640..comments2024-03-12T12:04:59.304+01:00Comments on Peter Fleischer: Privacy...?: 10 paths and they're all hardAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09908660263905877338noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6974997875021040765.post-6283867112589364432011-06-04T09:18:33.461+01:002011-06-04T09:18:33.461+01:00Please allow a tangent comment. You used the word...Please allow a tangent comment. You used the word "spectrum," and my mind supplied "continuum," instead. Upon consideration, I liked your word better. The color spectrum is a continuum in terms of wavelength, but the eye perceives discrete colors, nevertheless bound by ordinal rules. I wonder if the privacy "spectrum," can be successfully organized into a logical progression. The idea of reducing it to a continuum might motivate us to try :-)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6974997875021040765.post-35259328044530881032010-10-06T11:15:21.098+01:002010-10-06T11:15:21.098+01:00Hi Felix, that's funny, because i first read &...Hi Felix, that's funny, because i first read 'an american tail', and it works too ;-) <br />I totally agree with you, but we have to 'swim' in a global context and it means that we have to care about the 'American Tale'. Here in France, i worked in a Marketing agency a couple of years ago, and privacy was a main point for us. Main doesn't mean unreadable and policies were actually pretty light. However, it was specific policies, what about a global service like Google? I guess it 's a legal Everest to rethink Global Privacy Policies... but well, let's do it ;-)Regishttp://pi-tic.over-blog.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6974997875021040765.post-68342764218828063782010-09-24T20:39:05.223+01:002010-09-24T20:39:05.223+01:00Hi, Regis
Our different European legislations don...Hi, Regis<br /><br />Our different European legislations don't ask us, the controllers, such a long 'privacy policies'. <br /><br />Almost in Spain (and France, I can suposse) we have clear the concrete points about we have to inform our customers or users. The rest is simply 'an american tale', as I often say my colleages. <br /><br />We tend to 'copy' things coming from USA, and they aren't all correct for us. They are correct for them.Félix Harohttp://www.bitsofprivacy.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6974997875021040765.post-32554067416025671722010-09-07T12:33:56.870+01:002010-09-07T12:33:56.870+01:00Dear Peter, first I d like to thank you for your b...Dear Peter, first I d like to thank you for your blog, I am an attentive follower. Secondly, i am quite sure that your french is far better than my english, so i switch in French. <br /><br />House counsel dans le monde du software je suis passionné par les TIC et dirige un Blog sur le sujet (http://pi-tic.over-blog.com/). La lecture de votre Post m’interpelle car, moi aussi à l’occasion de mes congés dans les Alpes, j’ai eu l’occasion de prendre du recul sur certains sujets, et notamment sur les ‘Privacy Policies’. Le constat est évident, la quasi-totalité des Policies sont illisibles pour un lecteur non-averti. Il me semble que dans d’autres domaines du droit, la ‘vulgarisation’ est plus avancée, par exemple pour le droit d’auteur avec les licences Creative Commons qui se répandent sur le net (http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/). Ne pourrait on pas travailler dans ce sens ? Identifier les règles communes fondamentales et offrir aux individus un accès rapide et interactif à leurs droits en front, tout en conservant l’exhaustivité des Privacy Policies en back ? Qu’en pensez vous ?Regishttp://pi-tic.over-blog.com/noreply@blogger.com