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RESPECT

Programme: FP7 - SEC

Instrument: Collaborative Project

Total Project budget: € 3.492.687

Duration: 40 months (February 2012- May 2015)

Full project title: RESPECT : Rules, Expectations & Security through Privacy-Enhanced Convenient Technologies


RUG responsibilities:

RUG is Overall Project Coordinator of the RESPECT Project and is also Work Package leader of:

WP15 Toolkit for policy makers and police/security forces. The objectives of this WP are to create a tool-kit capable of pan-European application (and even beyond) for policy makers and users of surveillance which will be composed of two main items:

1) a matrix-style checklist incorporating operational/technical-economics-social factors – legal aspects based which could be utilised as a decision-support tool for policy-makers assessing systems specifically designed for surveillance (including the development of system design guidelines) and

2) Model force-level regulations which can be adopted by a police force for the deployment of Surveillance systems including large-scale integrated systems.

Both the matrix and the regulations would balance citizens’ rights (of privacy) and security concerns.

Project Summary:

Convenience and cost-effectiveness are the two key considerations for both citizens and security forces when deciding which technologies to embrace or avoid in the Information Society. State actors and private corporations adopt information communication technologies (ICTs) because they are cost-effective. The motivation for adoption may be different in the private and public sectors but once adopted these ICTs are then capable of being bridged in multiple ways permitting police/security forces to go beyond the data they gather directly but also increasingly tap into data gathered and stored by private corporations. These ICTs, which have to date gone through a period of largely organic growth, will be deemed to be “in balance” if they are implemented in a way which respects individual privacy while still maximising convenience, profitability, public safety and security. RESPECT seeks to investigate if the current and foreseeable implementation of ICTs in surveillance is indeed “in balance” and, where a lack of balance may exist or is perceived by citizens not to exist, the project explores options for redressing the balance through a combination of Privacy-Enhancing Technologies and operational approaches. Investigating at least five key sectors not yet tackled by other recent projects researching surveillance (CCTV, database mining and interconnection, on-line social network analysis, RFID & geo-location/sensor devices, financial tracking), RESPECT will also carry out quantitative and qualitative research on citizens’ awareness and attitudes to surveillance. RESPECT will produce tools that would enable policy makers to understand the socio-cultural as well as the operational and economic impact of surveillance systems. The project will also produce operational guidelines incorporating privacy by design approaches which would enable law enforcement agencies to deploy surveillance systems with lowest privacy risk possible and maximum security gain to citizens.

For further information please contact: Melania Tudorica (m.tudorica@step-rug.nl).

Last modified:29 April 2024 09.34 a.m.