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[http://ruddyconsult.tripod.com/bibliography.htm bibliography]
 
[http://ruddyconsult.tripod.com/bibliography.htm bibliography]
  
These are the notes of the session, which set out to list the avenues available to Europeans to combat the vast new set of surveillance practices revealed by Edward Snowden (transcript thanks to Nicolas Pettiaux):
+
These are the notes of the session (edited again in Jan.2014), which set out to list the avenues available to Europeans to combat the vast new set of surveillance practices revealed by Edward Snowden (transcript thanks to Nicolas Pettiaux):
  
 
1) Go through the existing data protection system
 
1) Go through the existing data protection system
 
+
2a) Impose criminal sanctions, as proposed by AKVorrat, on actions taken in violation of data protection norms.
2a) Impose criminal sanctions, as proposed by AKVorrat
 
 
2b) Suspend the Terrorist Finance and Tracking Program TFTP which led to exposure of Europeans' financial data at SWIFT and the Safe Harbor decision
 
2b) Suspend the Terrorist Finance and Tracking Program TFTP which led to exposure of Europeans' financial data at SWIFT and the Safe Harbor decision
 
3) TransAtlantic Trade and Investment Partnership TTIP  / NAFTA
 
 
WTO - GATS: investor / state disputes
 
 
MAI (Multilateral Agreement on Investment)
 
 
Non tariff barriers
 
  
4) Mobilize lawyers / doctors, who are legally obliged to maintain client confidentiality such as
+
3)  1) Go through the existing institutions of representative government such as the European Parliament, and its newly published report on surveillance (with panelists)
[https://rechtsanwaelte-gegen-totalueberwachung.de/]
+
4) Monitor the negotiations on a Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership TTIP
 +
Especially the investor / state dispute provisions based on WTO - GATS and NAFTA are worrisome. this is reminiscent of the attempt to negotiate the MAI (Multilateral Agreement on Investment) that failed at the OECD in the late Nineties. Social standards are sometimes treated as merely non tariff barriers in this domain.
  
5) Treaties such as INTCFN
+
5) Mobilize lawyers / doctors, who are legally obliged to maintain client confidentiality such as the German initiative https://rechtsanwaelte-gegen-totalueberwachung.de/
  
6) Industrial espionage
+
5) Treaties such as that upon which the EU Intelligence Analysis Centre (INTCFN) is based, http://eeas.europa.eu
  
7) Partners with European competitors to US firms (eg Cloud)
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6) Mobilize companies worried about industrial espionage
  
* Expose threats to business and losses
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7) Mobilize partners with European competitors to US firms (eg Cloud), exposing threats to business and losses, thus supporting the building of a European cloud infrastructure  
 
 
* Support the building of a European cloud infrastructure
 
  
 
8) Support whistleblowers
 
8) Support whistleblowers
  
* advocate better laws
+
  advocate for better laws
* unveil hypocrisy of our government with respect to Snowden / a citizen right being
+
  unveil the hypocrisy of our government with respect to Snowden; it is a citizen right to defend the truth.
  
9) Human rights watch  
+
9) Human rights watch
  
 
10) Freedom of info (FOI) requests to open up secret agreements
 
10) Freedom of info (FOI) requests to open up secret agreements
  
accessinfo.europe  
+
accessinfo.europe asktheeu.org mysociety.org
asktheeu.org
+
 
mysociety.org
 
 
 
11) Human rights principles: necessary and proportional
 
11) Human rights principles: necessary and proportional
  
Tshane principles  
+
R. Shane's principles, http://rshanegreen.com/category/principles/
  
12) Track voting of elected politicians  
+
12) Track voting of elected politicians (open government, mémoire politique of La Quadrature)
(open government, mémoire politique of La Quadrature)
 
  
13) Resist extraterritorial power of USA
+
13) Resist the extraterritorial power of USA
  
14) Attend meetings and share information with NGOs having similar aims (e.g. through the mediakit of La Quadrature, or [http://fiff.de/veranstaltungen/fiff-jahrestagungen/fiff-jt-2013/vortraege Digital@Amnesty])
+
14) Attend meetings and share information with NGOs having similar aims (e.g. through the mediakit of La Quadrature, or Digital@Amnesty)

Version vom 15. Januar 2014, 17:29 Uhr

This page was used to plan the session [[1]].

There may be a follow-up event in 2014. Pre-eventCPDP

One "avenue" for Europeans to counter U.S. surveillance scandals is the negotiations for a Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). However linking international trade policy with data protection has its risks, as exemplified by this Deutsche Welle story In the U.S. there has been a call for keeping data protection issues outside this trade agreement; this call was issued by the NGO Center for Digital Democracy

Update 22.11.2013 Our request to the European Commission had to wait for permission from the Council to give us further information. [2] It bore no fruit, but this news-story explains (why in German) [3]

Here is a new human rights proposal from the recent Warsaw meeting of privacy commissioners.

The Transatlantic Consumer Dialog [TACD] is also working on the TTIP in general, and will hold a meeting in Brussels on 29th October.

There is a new paper on data protection and the TTIP, which will be presented briefly, to which this is the bibliography

These are the notes of the session (edited again in Jan.2014), which set out to list the avenues available to Europeans to combat the vast new set of surveillance practices revealed by Edward Snowden (transcript thanks to Nicolas Pettiaux):

1) Go through the existing data protection system 2a) Impose criminal sanctions, as proposed by AKVorrat, on actions taken in violation of data protection norms. 2b) Suspend the Terrorist Finance and Tracking Program TFTP which led to exposure of Europeans' financial data at SWIFT and the Safe Harbor decision

3) 1) Go through the existing institutions of representative government such as the European Parliament, and its newly published report on surveillance (with panelists) 4) Monitor the negotiations on a Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership TTIP Especially the investor / state dispute provisions based on WTO - GATS and NAFTA are worrisome. this is reminiscent of the attempt to negotiate the MAI (Multilateral Agreement on Investment) that failed at the OECD in the late Nineties. Social standards are sometimes treated as merely non tariff barriers in this domain.

5) Mobilize lawyers / doctors, who are legally obliged to maintain client confidentiality such as the German initiative https://rechtsanwaelte-gegen-totalueberwachung.de/

5) Treaties such as that upon which the EU Intelligence Analysis Centre (INTCFN) is based, http://eeas.europa.eu

6) Mobilize companies worried about industrial espionage

7) Mobilize partners with European competitors to US firms (eg Cloud), exposing threats to business and losses, thus supporting the building of a European cloud infrastructure

8) Support whistleblowers

  advocate for better laws
  unveil the hypocrisy of our government with respect to Snowden; it is a citizen right to defend the truth.

9) Human rights watch

10) Freedom of info (FOI) requests to open up secret agreements

accessinfo.europe asktheeu.org mysociety.org

11) Human rights principles: necessary and proportional

R. Shane's principles, http://rshanegreen.com/category/principles/

12) Track voting of elected politicians (open government, mémoire politique of La Quadrature)

13) Resist the extraterritorial power of USA

14) Attend meetings and share information with NGOs having similar aims (e.g. through the mediakit of La Quadrature, or Digital@Amnesty)