-- By YoungLanYea - 06 Mar 2022 (second draft)
The right to informational self-determination is not an absolute right as it can be restricted under certain circumstances. Restrictions may occur mainly in relation to the exercise of state power for national defense, police, investigation, trial, taxation, welfare, etc. However, such restrictions must follow the general principles of restriction of fundamental rights. And the standard of “compelling state interest” should not be usurped by private intermediaries empowered by the state power wielders to continue their privacy invasion under the name of technological development.
These days, there is almost no space for reasonable expectation of privacy. Since the platforms literally corresponds to a station for information, if security on the platform is not achieved, information security for all of the accumulated information cannot be achieved. And once the risk of accumulated information becoming a tool for state surveillance gets exposed, the privacy infringement becomes no longer an issue that is solely in the private realm but a state action of which its constitutionality should be questioned. This is the reason why a new standard of judgment is needed.
Moreover, the trend of declining rational expectation of privacy is cleverly designed and implemented by the power house of information. Therefore, there will be no reversal of the current trend of decreasing privacy. Power house of information here refers to large multinational IT companies that possess and manage huge amounts of information, encouraged by the state to continue doing so. Information power will continue to lower the hurdle of ‘reasonable expectation of privacy’ as it is these IT companies’ interest to keep their business prosperous by preventing any blockage of information flow and also meets the state’s interest of surveillance.
It should be recognized today that clandestine privacy breaches can become an instrument of oppression and dictatorship by the information powers. Cloud, social media, and other web browsing are all concentrating our information on a handful of conglomerates. They collect information globally and it is difficult to predict what kind of power they will have and how they will be used. By them, our privacy will continue to be exposed whether we like it or not. In view of these changes, a new privacy protection standard is called for. As science and technology continue to develop, the privacy protection standards will likely evolve as the struggle to prevent the destruction of the sacred realm of privacy by the courts will persist.
In order to determine whether the restrictions on the right to informational self-determination due to private intermediaries providing their platforms to assist state surveillance are constitutional, the justification of such clandestine surveillance system must be thoroughly investigated. For this, it is necessary to elucidate whether the legitimacy of the ostensibly claimed state function is genuine. Next, it should be strictly verified whether the person operating the monitoring system has a legitimate purpose and authority, exceeds the required range, and is operated according to a legitimate procedure. The right to informational self-determination is the absolute minimum constitutional guarantee device that is necessary to prevent the possibility of damage to the dignity of an existential personality and the foundation of a free and democratic system in the information society. In addition, it must be established as one of the most essential fundamental rights in the information society. And we should all participate to bolster and protect such a fundamental right by knowing and choosing the right ways of providing our information.
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Notes
1 : Olmstead v. United Sates, 277 U.S. 438 (1928).
2 : Richard Sobel, Barry Horwitz, Gerald Jenkins, The Fourth Amendment Beyond Katz, Kyllo and Jones: Reinstating Justifiable Reliance As a More Secure Constitutional Standard For Privacy, 22 B.U. Pub. Int. L.J. 1, 6 (2013).
3 : Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27, 28, 121 S. Ct. 2038, 2040, 150 L. Ed. 2d 94 (2001).