Celebrating input privacy

Posted by Jane Horvath, Senior Privacy Counsel;
Peter Fleischer, Global Privacy Counsel; and Shuman Ghosemajumder, Business Product Manager for Trust and Safety

Last year, the Council of Europe had a great view. Based on polling that showed that 70% of Europeans did not understand how their personal input was being protected, the Council decided to hold the first annual details Protection Day on January 28, 2007. Privacy experts visited schools and universities, launched knowledge campaigns, and held press conferences in locations all through Europe, informing and educating consumers about their personal notes rights and protections.

Lack of understanding about info protection on the World Wide Web is not only a European issue, it’s a global one. As more and more personal data comes online every day, it’s increasingly vital that users all by the world understand both the benefits and potential risks of online details sharing, and the tools at their disposal to control and manage the goods they share online. In recognition of the global importance of input protection, the U.S. and Canada have joined 27 European countries to celebrate Data Privacy Day 2008 that Monday, January 28th.

As part of the day’s events, we’ll join legal scholars,

privacy professionals, and government officials from Europe and the U.S. at an universal documents privacy conference being held at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. We’ll plus contribute to efforts to raise awareness and promote understanding of notes privacy issues by releasing the third video in our privacy series (”Google Privacy: A Look at Cookies”) on our YouTube Privacy Channel. that video offers a closer look at how cookies work and how web sites and advertisers use them to personalize our online experiences. We’ve additionally developed a privacy booklet (pdf-web version coming soon!) that you can download to get an in-depth look at our privacy practices and approach, and have co-sponsored the creation of educational materials on teen online privacy for parents and educators. The goal of all these efforts is to help educate you about online details privacy so that you can assemble more informed choices about how you use online products and services.

We hope that you’ll take a few minutes on Monday to learn something new, and that input Privacy Day reinforces existing global efforts to educate consumers about online details collection, use, and protection.

Orginal post by Karen

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