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The future of privacy:
a
balancing act
Trust.
It’s one of the most valued commodities in business
today. Could privacy hold the key to unlocking greater
trust between businesses and consumers?
We think it can. But first we need to understand the
imbalance in that relationship today, and what needs
to change…
An unfair trade
Today, data is more than
a piece of
information; it’s
a unit of value
exchange.
Consumers have it;
companies want it. Data
enables brands to
personalize services and
meet
consumer needs.
But this has created a digital
dichotomy: as the
value of data has
rocketed, corporations have
profited at
the expense of
privacy, with individuals giving away
more and more of their personal information – sometimes
unwittingly. This ‘monetization’ creates an imbalance.
Consumer
trust erodes
The data explosion and
scope creep
have
pushed the
line too far in favor
of the
companies harvesting data.
Practices like over-collecting
and monetizing data
without
consent, misuse of data,
or a
lack of clarity
about how and
why organizations were
collecting data,
have
damaged consumer trust.
Privacy policies filled with
pages of legal jargon go
against the spirit of
transparency.
In 2007, researchers successfully de-anonymised a dataset of the video streaming company
ICO 2019 investigation finds one visit to a website “can result in a person’s personal data being seen by hundreds of organisations”
Data gathered from a Facebook personality test ended up being used to profile voters in political elections
In 2014, an employee used ‘God View’ to track people’s real-time locations
Regulation to
the rescue?
Governments the world over
are
starting
to realize that
privacy is a fundamental
human right.
Regulations enforce that right
and enshrine it in law.
They remind companies to do
the
right thing – to
collect
and use data appropriately,
ease the
burden on
consumers and give easy
ways to opt out – and
enforce
the rules for those that
don’t.
2018
EU General Data Protection Regulation
2017
India’s Government recognises privacy as a right
2023
By this date, Gartner estimates that 65% of the world’s population will have their personal information covered by modern privacy regulations.
2020
The California Consumer Privacy Act
The consent conundrum:
giving back
control
Now the pendulum is swinging back in consumers’ favor.
More aware of their rights, and about how their personal
information is
used for profit, they’re looking for greater control over
their digital self.
78%
Consumers have taken steps to reduce their digital footprint
Consumers have taken steps to reduce their digital footprint
66%
Consumers are more likely to be loyal to a brand they trust to use data appropriately
Consumers are more likely to be loyal to a brand they trust to use data appropriately
65%
Consumers would stop using brands that don’t behave responsibly with personal data
Consumers would stop using brands that don’t behave responsibly with personal data
What if there was a better way?
Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) have the capability
to deliver the insights without
identifying the individual.
PETs can protect privacy, but they need to be used with care as a configuration that favors analytical utility may result in privacy risks being retained. Having the ability to measure and mitigate the hidden privacy risks in a dataset is essential.
Privacy-by-design
Key strategies for privacy-by-design include separation and hiding of personal data, aggregation, minimization and abstraction to ensure re-identification cannot occur.
De-identification
A process that removes direct identifiers and
transforms other values to prevent personal identity
from being revealed during research that uses data.
Mindful data mining
Responsible data analysis that delivers social good and
maintains individuals’ data protection rights.
Independent anonymization
Technological, structural, legal and organisational
safeguards to ensure the true anonymization of data
striking the balance between privacy and utility.
Pseudonymization
Where full anonymization is not required or
possible,
pseudonymization has several incentives
under data privacy
regulations.
Synthetic data
Data that is generated to resemble an original
dataset.
May contain privacy risk depending on
similarities to the
initial source.
The future
of trust
Privacy is dead, or so they say.
We respectfully disagree.
It is possible to deliver memorable
and personalized customer service,
delivering a real business benefit,
while still protecting privacy and
personal data.
It is possible to strike this
balance
when companies act
responsibly by:
Being transparent and ethical
Embedding a culture of privacy
protection into their DNA
Treating personal
data with respect
… then the consumer’s trust is
earned. In the new world,
privacy isn’t a compliance
overhead. It’s a
competitive
differentiator.
“Brands are now able to build ever more detailed profiles of us from our digital footprint, but when it comes to using our personal information to build relationships, there is clearly a fine line between being helpful and behaving ethically, to being invasive and creepy.”
Felix Marx
Chief Executive Officer, Truata
“Safeguarding privacy and human autonomy is going to be one of the most important challenges of the fourth industrial revolution.”
Bernard Marr
Author, futurist and technology advisor
“The public are using their voice. It is now in the hands of companies to address how they use this data, build trust with the public and protect our digital selves as we embrace innovative use of data in the future.
Jules Polonetsky
CEO, Future of Privacy Forum
Understand your
privacy risk
The Truata privacy risk assessment helps you explore your
unique data
sets and identify any areas of risk, so
that you can maximize your data’s
value without compromising customer privacy. We’ll also look
at the
impact that evolving regulations have on your
organization, and the
opportunities they create.
A three-stage workshop then identifies, examines and
qualifies your
analytical processes. We’ll help you
develop a privacy-enhanced data
strategy for analytical use cases, based on best practices
for data
management and analytics.
Business
Consumer