Access by Various artists

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Access: Privacy and the right to consent are all some people have left. But not for long.

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  • Moz, in reply to Lynn Yum,

    “Privacy is freedom”

    In that case we're screwed, because the tools to eliminate privacy are becoming cheap and readily available, and there's not even a theoretical mechanism to prevent that. Viz, currently only a few rich governments can eliminate privacy and then only for a subset of their subjects, but the technology for doing that wholesale is becoming available and the system that is doing that doesn't have a visible endpoint. What used to be nigh on impossible, say tracking and eavesdropping a cellphone, has become first possible, then mobile, then commercially available using a briefcase-sized device, and currently there are rumours that a phone-book sized version for under $50000 exists. Likewise security cameras, which are already common but largely un-watched, but people are working very hard to build AI's that will watch all of them all the time. Many organisations already keep all the footage waiting for the day when they can analyse it.

    A much better approach, IMO, is to decide how people can live without privacy and what the penalties should be for people who use private information. Much like cops who access the police database illegally now... is that what we want, that every now and then a scapegoat is chosen and reprimanded for something everyone does?

    Sydney, West Island • Since Nov 2006 • 1233 posts Report

  • Rosemary McDonald, in reply to Sacha,

    Which is why they want to track individuals over time – so they can tie contracted payments for long-term individual outcomes rather than single interventions and population-level results.

    They intend to apply privatised insurance industry actuarial models across all social services. Very similar to how the US health system is organised – ie: a costly disaster. This is the endgame Bill English, Steven Joyce and Paula Bennett have been working towards for many years now without effective opposition. Time to step up.

    Yes, yes, yes.

    Nail squarely on head Sacha.

    The buggers have an agenda.

    Waikato, or on the road • Since Apr 2014 • 1346 posts Report

  • Hilary Stace,

    Rape Crisis is not going to cooperate. Privacy of clients too important. http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/326040/rape-crisis-will-risk-funding-to-keep-data-private

    Wgtn • Since Jun 2008 • 3229 posts Report

  • mark taslov, in reply to Hilary Stace,

    That’s a relief Hilary, good on them. I really hope more organisations follow suit.

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • mark taslov,

    Ursula Cheer says the new rules have an element of compulsion and raise questions of consent.

    These proposed requirements are devastating and potentially life threatening for those whose identities are not legally recognised

    Each refuge within the collective is run independently, so they will each have their own policies, but in general our policy is that refuge is open to anyone who self-identifies as a woman, no identification necessary.

    Hadassah Green
    info@refuge.org.nz

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • mark taslov,

    Paora Crawford Moyle on Te Wahanga Parakuihi.

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • mark taslov, in reply to mark taslov,

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • Sacha,

    Privacy Commissioner to report within a few days.

    Ak • Since May 2008 • 19745 posts Report

  • Hilary Stace,

    Yesterday we saw a large protest at parliament by students There was much talk about the importance of consent, and the right to consent and education about consent. Yet with this policy (above) the Government denies and disregards the right to consent. We need to join the dots - consent is not something optional, which can be used in one situation and not another. I thought it hypocritical of Paula Bennett to speak to the crowd yesterday encouraging the 'bravery' of the students, while her Government seeks to deny consent to some of the most vulnerable citizens.

    Wgtn • Since Jun 2008 • 3229 posts Report

  • Joe Wylie, in reply to Hilary Stace,

    I thought it hypocritical of Paula Bennett to speak to the crowd yesterday encouraging the 'bravery' of the students, while her Government seeks to deny consent to some of the most vulnerable citizens.

    Especially so considering Bennett's track record in releasing personal information for blatantly political purposes. One need only exercise a fraction of the kind of cynicism that's guided her career to assume that her minders decided that being associated Saturday's protest would enhance her 'progressive' image. That such an empty bottle could be considered potential PM material only demonstrates how National failed to nurture genuine talent through the Key years.

    flat earth • Since Jan 2007 • 4593 posts Report

  • Hilary Stace, in reply to Joe Wylie,

    I found it interesting that so much of the media reporting covered her speech when there were numerous other speeches by some articulate young people and other MPs which were much more enthusiastically received. It may be because it is so rare to see a National MP attend and address a protest at parliament.

    Wgtn • Since Jun 2008 • 3229 posts Report

  • mark taslov, in reply to Hilary Stace,

    Yet with this policy (above) the Government denies and disregards the right to consent. We need to join the dots –

    Consolidating – from the unconsented cosmetic surgery on the genitals of infants, onto the “rights of the child”, through the systemic abuse of the young by employees of the state, via the fight for sovereignty of our bodies, confronted by the lack of explicit consent legislation, the summary incarceration and solitary confinement of “at risk” individuals, the criminalisation of euthanasia, the theft of land and displacement of culture, the exploitation of our natural resources, over the consent needed to build a fence higher than 2.5 metres, mass surveillance, the erosion of privacy and ignored advanced care plans – through the myriad other failures of our collective humanity – over such a very short history – all converging on consent of the governed – our tacit assent of this abomination. The winds asking where we draw the line – the white washing no longer quite fully masks the stench of our degenerate underbelly.

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • Moz, in reply to Hilary Stace,

    much talk about the importance of consent, ... Yet with this policy the Government denies and disregards the right to consent.

    I think you need to be careful here, because the government is using the language of consent and providing the appearance of it. So when you say "disregards the right to consent", Pullya Benefit can turn round and say "not true, here is where people using the service provide consent".

    The problem was that this ignores the possibility that a citizen might want to withhold consent. That is a very different thing.

    Without the right to not consent the government is just going through the motions and the "consent" they get is meaningless. They are very directly saying "government provides these life-saving services, but the price is your privacy". It's the cliche used in law lectures to explain consent, in fact: "your money or your life". The consent obtained is not meaningful, and the process of extracting it is a crime.

    Sydney, West Island • Since Nov 2006 • 1233 posts Report

  • Carol Stewart, in reply to Hilary Stace,

    Yes. I thought Marama Fox got a much warmer reception, as did the amazing Adair Hannah. But hardly surprising given the crowd.

    Wellington • Since Jul 2008 • 830 posts Report

  • Hilary Stace,

    Attachment

    Some of the crowd at the protest at Parliament on Thursday against NGOs having to hand over confidential client details. A great line up of speakers. I was particularly impressed by Poto Williams who I haven't heard speak before. She mentioned how long it can take women to seek help and the importance of the relationship of absolute trust and confidentiality between the woman and the agency.

    Wgtn • Since Jun 2008 • 3229 posts Report

  • mark taslov,

    Yes. I thought Marama Fox got a much warmer reception, as did the amazing Adair Hannah. But hardly surprising given the crowd.

    I wish I had been there, so much, because the media coverage, the messaging is kind of frightening. From what I saw of the placards, the focus was on consent, rape, my body my choice etc. Then the headlines read: It’s time to teach teenage boys about consent – whether they like it or not or Dear parents. We need to talk about your sons or the articles stating:

    "it should start with a father or mother or both telling their son that no means no. This is about respect. This is about boundaries"

    We were taught about consent at school. I remember that class, I remember sitting in that class with my future rapist, learning about consent, it was discussed in the same gendered heteronormative cisnormative way New Zealand media voices continue to, like it’s 1999.

    Alison Mau’s piece contains this unusual quote:

    "Women and victims are expected not to get raped, rather than rapists being expected not to rape."

    “Women and victims”, it’s an odd pairing or words, not the usual collocation, unusual in context, almost as if there’s an ideological barrier our messaging just can’t breach:

    We raise people (most often men, t̶o̶ ̶b̶e̶ ̶s̶u̶r̶e̶, but people of all genders can be both the victim and the aggressor) to believe that rape is a very specific crime which happens when a stranger forces himself on a woman in a dark alley against her will. It is repeatedly framed in this way, and rarely are the myriad other ways in which we can violate another person sexually discussed. This leads to countless “normal, good” people who will engage in a sex act with someone who cannot or has not provided consent, who is perhaps even moderately resisting, and think that it is a perfectly healthy example of what sex can look like. Because we don’t often enforce the idea that rape can happen between friends, at a party, within a marriage, or in any combination of genders, we leave many people believing that what happened to them (or what they enacted on another person) is not at all a crime.

    So when we here the familiar refrain “we need to teach our sons consent” the implication is that we need to teach our sons to respect others right of consent. Right? The implication is not that we need to teach our sons that they also have the right to consent. Yet we expect them to recognise others’ rights to consent. In Alison Mau’s article on misogyny she does donate some space to paraphrasing one of the protest organisers, Wellington East Girls’ College student Sorcha Ashworth:

    She says it’s common for people to take advantage of others when they’re drunk. It happens to boys and girls, she says (are you surprised?) and there’s “a disgusting double standard” where there’s less of an outrage when a girl takes advantage of a guy.

    Makes sense to me. If we’re going to have a serious conversation about rape culture. We’re not going to see a notable improvement unless we teach *everyone* about consent, and teach it right. That doesn’t begin in school or even in the home, it begins with a media whose record appears to be broken, there’s no new messaging and progress? The evidence may be found in the dessert.

    Why do we need to teach our sons about consent? How would that have prevented me from being held down and forced to penetrate? How would that have in anyway influenced the stranger who decided it was ok to wake me by performing oral sex? How effective would that have be in dissuading the people who have jumped on me, held me down? How does that work? Those ones weren’t our sons, they were daughters. If we’re talking strictly about #rapeculture, this is rape culture.

    Rape culture is a sociological concept used to describe a setting in which rape is pervasive and normalized due to societal attitudes about gender and sexuality.

    We’re either advocating and working to improve the visibility of all rape, regardless of sex, class, ethnicity, gender or we’re perpetuating rape culture, we’re obscuring the rapists, we’re aiding them, taking the focus off them and the rape they commit.

    Rape is about power, it’s about dominance about taking what is not yours, about not respecting another will. When I was a teen the meme going around was that “rape isn’t about sex it’s about violence”. This knowledge was of scant use, as it is to anyone who has been raped without violence. Flawed messaging obscures rape, it protects rape and rapists.

    Why are we calling for consent to be taught in school when our laws aren’t concerned with consent? What is knowing about consent worth if we can’t prosecute our rapists as rapists, all of them. Where is New Zealand’s No means no law? Why are the media not asking this? It’s glaring that it took the WC boys and not the outcome of the Kuggeleijn trial to set the opinion mill turning?

    The media’s insistance of the binary structure, of these bizarrely specific stereotypes of boys and girls, of men and women, laid article by article, mortared in, does nothing to dismantle the gender construct, in fact quite the opposite. It mains the gender construct, it’s the sustenance, it’s the misdirection of the rapist, catering to demographics. Rape is a platform to discuss education policy.

    I don’t in any way doubt these journalists’ best intentions, but the framing, that frame they’ve been given, the one they’re expected to trot out every time rape comes up for serious discussion? It’s anachronistic and it has been for as long as I can recall.

    Rape is power, Donald Trump is the most alarming symptom of rape culture I have ever seen, but we have our own Trumps here, lurking in plain sight, some of them prosecuted even, tucked away. We keep their secrets safe. The messaging – we shouldn’t talk about rape itself, we shouldn’t report rape, the New Zealand Government does not recognise equally every individual’s right to consent to sex. Not on our own terms, that just hasn’t yet become a practical concern for it as an entity.

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • Hilary Stace,

    Thank you for that, Mark.

    Wgtn • Since Jun 2008 • 3229 posts Report

  • Sacha,

    Yes, thank you Mark.

    Ak • Since May 2008 • 19745 posts Report

  • Sacha,

    Contract granted to built the data-sharing software. At least they're locals I guess.

    "From a technology perspective, we sit as an intermediary between the two.

    "The NGO can say, 'We want to share this information with an agency - specifically these bits of information, and nothing else', so what we do is we pull that information out, then translate it into something that the agency can use, then push it straight into their systems."

    They were "straddling an area between security and transparency", he said.

    All very well. As usual, our focus needs to be on policy and contract detail, not technology.

    Ak • Since May 2008 • 19745 posts Report

  • Angela Hart,

    so now not only do the NGO's have to provide our data to government agencies, they also have to be okay with it going through a third party. When's that privacy report coming out? It's hard to see how this is going to be secure- I don't want a bar of it. Big Brother is watching you, forget about nanny state.

    Christchurch • Since Apr 2014 • 614 posts Report

  • Sacha, in reply to Angela Hart,

    When's that privacy report coming out?

    couple of weeks more is latest I read.

    Ak • Since May 2008 • 19745 posts Report

  • Sacha,

    Newsroom article anticipates the Privacy Commissioner's ruling but concludes in any case:

    The weak and powerless in our society will, of course, have no choice but to share their data and that means people are differently affected depending on their socio-economic status

    Ak • Since May 2008 • 19745 posts Report

  • mark taslov,

    @Hilary, Sacha,

    I wish I could say it’s my pleasure.

    We’ve had our communications intercepted, our data hacked. The proposed MSD data collection is only going to increase our chances of being doxxed, deadnamed and clocked and misgendered. It was suggested to me a couple of years back on here that my interest in the Snowden et all might be a swoon to the popularity of the issue at the time. As an assumption that couldn’t be wronger.

    Any institutions or individuals using this site or any of its associated sites for studies or projects -You DO NOT have permission to use any of my profile or pictures in any form or forum both current and future. If you have or do, it will be considered a violation of my privacy and will be subject to legal ramifications.

    When joining the online transgender community a decade or so ago these warnings were on almost every profile, fueled by the common knowledge that details of our lives were being used without our consent for research, our images are regularly stolen and disseminated. These activities are carried out against a community riddled with mental illness, whose marginalisation compels prioritising privacy above all else.

    Although these notices have become less prevalent since Edward Snowden’s revelations, the revival of The nothing to hide argument is incredidbly problematic to closeted gender nonconformist and trans people who by virtue of societal attitudes remain compromised in terms of openly challenging surveillance legislation.

    As for rape culture in New Zealand, I noticed this today.

    Before her trial, Reriti rejected an offer to plead guilty to a less serious charge of having consensual sex with an underage boy, and be sentenced to six years’ jail, less an unspecified period for her mental health problems.

    Our justice system was prepared to knock 4 years off a prison sentence if a rapist was prepared to acknowledge that she did have sex with the 10-13 year old boy …and he wanted it. A symbolic gesture.

    But we’re to assume that this is not why high profile commentators are calling for our sons to be taught about consent. The system is infested with double standards. People scratch their heads as to why it’s dysfunctional.

    It’s time to teach teenage boys about consent – whether they like it or not

    Rapiest headline I’ve ever seen.

    Te Ika-a-Māui • Since Mar 2008 • 2281 posts Report

  • Angela Hart,

    Seriously Steven? My concern is that for the first time all of the data that all of the government departments hold on potentially all New Zealanders is going to one big database where it can be analysed. And it isn't anonymous.
    It's all very well saying if you've done nothing wrong you've nothing to hide and all that. I've done nothing wrong but I have valid concerns about the way Big Brother might utilise what it knows about me. I haven't consented to this. I, like most New Zealanders, have provided information from time to time to IRD, the education system, etc, which was requested for sensible reasons. I am not at all confident that the data will be used in a fair, transparent and sensible way by future governments. We have no checks and balances on our Government, it can do whatever it likes as long as it has a simple majority in Parliament.

    Christchurch • Since Apr 2014 • 614 posts Report

  • Joe Wylie, in reply to Angela Hart,

    We have no checks and balances on our Government, it can do whatever it likes as long as it has a simple majority in Parliament.

    Even in Australia, with the supposed checks and balances offered by its Federal upper house and multiple parliaments, a government agency has done a Paula Bennett and released confidential client information for political advantage.

    flat earth • Since Jan 2007 • 4593 posts Report

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