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Privacy Paradigm – Towards a Creative Commons for Privacy

3 March, 201524 November, 2015
| 2 Comments
| Copyright, Privacy

Privacy ParadigmI’ve recently given two presentations about the internet and privacy, the first a fortnight ago in UCD at the Student Legal Convention, and the second last week in WIT. My theme, both times, was the decline of privacy online, and what we can do about it, not only from regulation by Data Protection Commissioners to individual court cases, but also from protecting our own privacy to respecting the privacy of others. In the latter context, I called for a Creative Commons for Privacy and I suggested that it might be called Privacy Paradigm (but if you have a better idea, please let me know). In this post, I want to tease out what a Privacy Paradigm, a Creative Commons for Privacy, might look like and what it could do.

If the analogy is to Creative Commons, the first question must be: what does Creative Commons do? Have a look at the column on the right, and scroll down a bit to the box headed “Licence”. You’ll see a badge with three icons and some short-hand; and you’ll see accompanying text which explains that this blog is “licensed under a Creative Commons … License”. By these means, I signal not only that you may re-use my content, but also the conditions under which you may do so.…

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There’s an adjective for #Gryzzl on “Parks and Recreation” – it’s dysagurian

16 February, 201519 August, 2019
| 4 Comments
| Cinema, television and theatre, Dysaguria, Press Council, Privacy

Gryzzl HQThe mockumentary-style tv comedy series Parks and Recreation, according to Wikipedia, is “an American comedy on the NBC television network, starring Amy Poehler as Leslie Knope, a perky, mid-level bureaucrat in the parks department of Pawnee, a fictional town in Indiana”. According to IMDB, the series relates the “absurd antics of an Indiana town’s public officials as they pursue sundry projects to make their city a better place”. In Ireland, at least one season has been shown RTÉ Two; and in the UK, three seasons have been shown on BBC4. Alert: so, for Irish and UK readers of the blog who are fans of the show (and the Daily Edge recently gave 7 reasons why we should be), the remainder of this post is a great big spoiler.

At the end of series 6, Pawnee thinks they’ve struck gold when Gryzzl, an internet company marketing itself as “the cloud for your cloud”, sets up in town. But, in the farewell series 7, all is not well between Leslie and Gryzzl. …

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Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015 – IV – Staff, Pensions, Innovation and IP

6 February, 201525 February, 2021
| 5 Comments
| Copyright, CRC12 / CRC13, Universities

Wishing HandThis is the fourth and final post in a series on Senator Seán Barrett‘s Private Members’ Bill, the Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015, which was discussed last week in the Seanad (earlier posts are here, here and here).

Section 7 of the Bill relates to some staff issues. In particular, section 7(1)-(2) would have solved some of the problems associated with the interpretation of section 25(8)(b) of the Universities Act, 1997 (also here) in the Supreme Court in Fanning v UCC [2005] IEHC 264 (24 June 2005), aff’d [2008] IESC 59 (28 October 2008).…

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Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015 – III – Funding & remuneration

5 February, 201522 July, 2017
| 6 Comments
| Universities

Sean Barrett and Urusla ni ChoillThis is the third in a series of posts on Senator Seán Barrett‘s Private Members’ Bill, the Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015, which was discussed last week in the Seanad (earlier posts are here and here). Senator Barrett is pictured left, with one of his research assistants, Ursula Ní Choill, to whom, with Dr Charles Larkin, his other research assistant, he paid very warm tribute at the start of the Second Stage debate. Section 6 of the Bill relates to university funding. This section dealt principally with rates, scales or ranges of remuneration; and a wide definition of remuneration was provided in section 2(1) of the Bill (indeed, this definition would have been wider than the references in section 25 of the Universities Act, 1997 (also here) or the definition provided in the Heads of a Universities (Amendment) Bill, 2012 (pdf)).…

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Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015 – II – Tenure

4 February, 201511 March, 2015
| 5 Comments
| Tenure, Universities

Seanad Entrance, via Oireachtas websiteThis is the second in a series of posts on Senator Seán Barrett‘s Private Members’ Bill, the Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015, which was discussed last week in the Seanad (the first post is here). Section 5 of the Bill provides a definition of “academic tenure”. As the Explanatory Memorandum explains

… the protections afforded by academic tenure allow academics to investigate unfashionable, controversial, or distasteful topics or dissent from received wisdom, and to teach and publish their honest conclusions, without fear of external pressures (for example, from university donors, vociferous critics, or government) or internal censure (for example, by means of suspension or dismissal).

…

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Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015 – I – Introduction

3 February, 201511 March, 2015
| 6 Comments
| Universities

Pomodoro, Sfera con Sfera, in TCDSenator Seán Barrett, in conjunction with Senator Feargal Quinn and Senator David Norris, introduced the Universities (Development and Innovation) (Amendment) Bill 2015 as a Private Members’ Bill in the Seanad, and it was debated last week. It is an interesting and important Bill (full disclosure: I advised Seán in some of the drafting). It is relatively short, consisting of 10 sections and one Schedule, largely presented as a series of amendments to the Universities Act, 1997 (also here). But it is ambitious (see the full text here (pdf)). And had it prospered, it would have enacted some very important ideas and policies which would have put the development of Irish universities on a sound footing for quite some time to come. In this post, and the next three, I want to look at some of the issues raised by the Bill.

This Bill is Senator Barrett’s second run at university structures. His first, the Higher Education and Research (Consolidation and Improvement) Bill 2014, was introduced in the Seanad and had its Second Reading on 2 April last. It was discussed in detail at the time by Prof Steve Hedley (UCC) (here, here, here, here, and here), and Senator Barrett responded to those posts here.…

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University free speech rankings in the UK and the US

2 February, 201511 March, 2015
| 1 Comment
| Academic Freedom, Freedom of Expression, Universities

Spiked Free Speech on CampusFor the first Free Speech University Rankings (FSUR) in the UK, Spiked ranked the policies and actions of universities and students’ unions, for free speech purposes, using a traffic-light system – red is bad; amber has chilled speech; green means a hands-off approach to free speech. An overall ranking for an institution is given as an average of the two (university and students’ union) rankings. FSUR is the first step in a campaign by Spiked, in partnership with students around the UK, against free speech restrictions on campus in the UK.

I wonder how Trinity College Dublin would do under the FSUR heads of assessment:…

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The privations of privacy: from dystopia to dysaguria

29 January, 201519 August, 2019
| 6 Comments
| Cyberlaw, Dysaguria, Privacy

Dave Eggers The Circle coverI spoke yesterday evening at a Data Protection Day event in Trinity College Dublin. The theme was “What does the Internet say about you?”. It was organized by the Information Compliance Office and the Science Gallery in Trinity. Jessica Kelly of Newstalk introduced and chaired the event. You can download audio of my talk here (via SoundCloud), and you can download slides for my talk here (via SlideShare).

I was full of my usual caffeine-deprived doom about the challenges which technology pose for privacy. Jeanne Kelly, a partner in Dublin solicitors firm of Mason Hayes & Curran, spoke about the still-pending EU Data Protection Regulation. Conor Flynn, principal of Information Security Assurance Services, spoke about our digital footprints. And Sinéad McSweeney, Director of Public Policy for Europe, the Middle East and Aisa, at Twitter, talked about Twitter’s foundational commitments to freedom of expression and individual privacy. The evening was recorded for podcast, and I’ll blog about those presentations when the podcast is available.

In this post, I want to mention one point which I made near the end of my talk. I coined a new word – the last word in the title to this blogpost.…

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Welcome

Me in a hat

Hi there! Thanks for dropping by. I’m Eoin O’Dell, and this is my blog: Cearta.ie – the Irish for rights.


“Cearta” really is the Irish word for rights, so the title provides a good sense of the scope of this blog.

In general, I write here about private law, free speech, and cyber law; and, in particular, I write about Irish law and education policy.


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