It is with some irony that in April, an article detailing the amount of private data collected on smartphones appeared in the Tech section of the Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdoch’s flagship U.S. paper, which has been documenting the use of Internet-tracking technology and privacy implications for consumers in an investigative series titled “What They Know.”
In July, journalists at Murdoch’s British tabloid, News of the World, were accused of knowing all too well how to surreptitiously locate and extract private cellphone data for competitive advantage. Industrial level cellphone hacking was allegedly enabled by abuse of press access and financial power with help from corrupt politicians and police — reaching all the way into Scotland Yard. News of the World editors were accused of savaging the privacy of anyone they chose, from royals and prime ministers to the final calls of a deceased 13-year-old girl.
Although Murdoch Sr. and his son James Murdoch Jr. have denied knowledge of the hacking, the incidents sound a recurring theme in privacy and technology law: Who will guard the guards? That is, corporate toying with personal data will continue to escalate until the pendulum of public opinion is willing to swing in the direction of greater protection of privacy.
Murdoch’s digital media problems should not be a catalyst for limits on press freedoms — it was, after all, a competing London paper, The Guardian, that stood by the story in spite of possible political reprisal — but the News of the World events should be a catalyst for legal and technological efforts to improve privacy protection. One example: easier-to-use encryption technologies to help consumers protect data — especially Florida’s children and the elderly.
Anyone who has read the biographies chronicling the development of Murdoch’s digital news empire would quickly realize he had a gift for identifying and retaining some of the most talented technology developers on the planet. For example, Murdoch retained the world’s leading inventors in cryptography and data transmission to protect his digital programming content and efficiently transmit it to his satellite TV subscribers around the world. These alliances gave him a strategic technological advantage for his global media enterprise.
via Digital privacy: Who’s guarding the guards? – Business Monday – MiamiHerald.com.