The debate about online
privacy versus the battle against crime was given new life this week with an
attempt in Brazil to ban the popular messaging application WhatsApp. By Jill
Slay
A well-known and strict
judge in a regional area of Brazil issued a court order banning WhatsApp for 72
hours in the whole country on Monday, because of problems he was having getting
information from the company that owns the app.
That company is Facebook,
which bought the app for US$19 billion in 2014, and it was allegedly not
cooperating by handing over data from customers in a drug-running case that the
judge was presiding over.
One billion users
The app has become very
popular with smartphone users in many parts of the developing world since it
provides a free messaging service that rivals SMS.
In February this year, the
company said the app was used by one billion people, nearly one in seven people
on the planet. The number of users in Brazil is said to be about 100 million
people.
But the issue with WhatsApp
and other similar apps, including Wickr, is that they guarantee end-to-end
encrypted communications. It’s this feature that is very popular with those who
value personal privacy.
For criminals, it provides
a secure channel for avoiding surveillance of any kind. The only way their
planning and operations can be accessed by law enforcement agencies, if they
are communicated via WhatsApp, is with the cooperation of the company holding
the data.
But Facebook says it has no
power to access the user data anyway. This case appears to echo the same
sentiments as those displayed in the recent Apple versus FBI mobile phone
incident.
WhatsApp’s co-founder
and CEO Jan Koum issued
a statement via Facebook explaining why it did not have the data the court was
requesting:
Yet again millions of
innocent Brazilians are being punished because a court wants WhatsApp to turn
over information we repeatedly said we don’t have. Not only do we encrypt
messages end-to-end on WhatsApp to keep people’s information safe and secure,
we also don’t keep your chat history on our servers. When you send an
end-to-end encrypted message, no one else can read it – not even us.
Different
cultures
The case is another
instance of the lack of clarity between large US-based telecoms and social
media companies over collaboration and cooperation with international
governments.
The issue of access to and
use of data collected from social media is again happening in a framework of
different cultures, varying unexplored attitudes to privacy and within authoritarian
legislative systems.
This case had a short term
(and potentially longer term) and successful conclusion. The WhatsApp
suspension was lifted after 24 hours by another judge.
But this is not the first
time the WhatsApp service has been banned in Brazil. In December 2015, it was
banned for 48 hours. This was also lifted after about 12 hours.
Then, in March, the same
Brazilian judge who ordered this week’s ban ordered the vice president of
Facebook in Latin America, Diego Dzodan, to be detained by authorities
regarding lack of access to WhatsApp data. He was released after 24 hours.
In all cases, the aim of
the judges has been to obtain information about alleged criminal activities
such as drug trafficking. The approach may seem heavy-handed, but that could be
about to change.
Brazil is looking at
changes to its legislation governing the use of the internet that could see an
end to any attempts to shut down any app across the whole country.
One reform, proposed by
lower house deputy Esperidião Amin, would allow the blocking of specific
individuals or IP addresses suspected of illicit activity.
“It’s less dramatic than
withdrawing the service from the whole of the Brazilian population,” he told
Reuters.
Across borders
But this latest case highlights
several issues. First, there is an ongoing debate about the nature of the
internet and social media. Liberal democracies have an expectation of a right
to privacy, but within them, there is an equal demand for efficient law
enforcement, solutions to major crime and provision of national security and
protection from terrorism.
Second, companies such as
Facebook need to walk carefully and work across different cultures and legal
systems to achieve the balance between the demands for security and privacy.
It’s often hard to see how these can be achieved.
Third, cybersecurity and privacy
legislation is still in its infancy in many under-developed economies and
advanced applications are being accessed in economies where the legal
boundaries are not clear.
Thankfully, it is very hard
to envisage a situation such as this occurring in a country such as Australia,
where there has been a more engaged debate over the tension between technology,
legislation and privacy.
In more developed
economies, the problems that arise from the tension between privacy and
national security have had much more debate, but have not necessarily been
resolved for all citizens.
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