Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Home sweet home…. But do you know who is lurking in your space?
By Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Head of Data Privacy practice
The concept of the home through the ages has been considered as a metaphor for a safe place, where one could lead his family life peacefully. As John Ruskin wrote: “this is the true nature of home – it is the place of Peace; the shelter, not only from all injury, but from all terror, doubt, and division”.
Today some of us have changed our homes into smart homes. The smart home can be defined as a system of interconnected household devices capable of communicating with each other (through internet) and collecting information by monitoring the behaviour of the home occupants in order to adapt the home environment to them.
It has been stated that “by 2020 there will be 50 billion objects in the Internet of Things”.[1] The reality is that the integration of the domestic appliances to the home network make daily objects “smarter”.
The smart home is just one of the possible applications of the Internet of Things. There are different applications for various sectors, including but not limited to: wearables, smart cars, industrial IoT, drones and 3d printing.
It has been stated by Koops that “fundamental value of privacy suggests that it is vital for people to be able to withdraw from other people’s scrutiny at least some place and some time”[2]. This role is now mainly played by one’s home.
This highlights the importance of enabling trusted smart homes. Smart homes are possible thanks to the digital economy. But in order to enable a secure smart home, it is important to have in place the necessary legal safeguards able to efficiently cope with privacy threats.
Kitchin argues that “the visions of the smart home tend to focus on the supposed benefits, with little thought to its wider implications, […] and a concomitant impact on freedom and privacy”.[3]
Privacy is an articulated concept which entails different dimensions and values. As such we know that privacy violations involve a variety of types of harmful activities. In the moment of data collection the most relevant threats are related to the constant monitoring of behaviour. The reality is that a smart home allows a pervasive form of surveillance.
Disclosure of smart home information can threaten people’s security. In the smart home context, information dissemination may imply a loss of security.
Security is often considered as a trade-off with privacy. Hildebrandt argues that “we are often called upon to trade part of our privacy […] for security”. For example, many anti-terrorism measures adopted by governments erode citizens’ privacy in order to improve public security[4].
Section 19 of POPIA provides that all records and data:
- shall be obtained, transmitted and stored in such a way that they cannot be altered, extracted or destroyed by unauthorized persons; and
- that the integrity and confidentiality of personal information shall be protected.
This provision essentially obliged whomever controls the personal information beaming from your smart home, to ensure the security of the data being processed through appropriate technical and organisational measures.
Cybercriminals are lurking. Please consider the safety of your smart home, not only from COVID-19 but from criminals somewhere in cyberspace.
Ensure that
your security and privacy settings keep cybercriminals outside.
[1] Working Party 29
[2] FN Koops, B.J., and Prinsen, M. 2007. “Houses of Glass, Transparent Bodies: How New Technologies Affect Inviolability of the Home and Bodily Integrity in the Dutch Constitution”. Information & Communications Technology Law. 16 (3): 177-190.
[3]Kitchin, R., Martin, D. 2011. “Code/space: software and everyday life”. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
[4] Today in light of the COVID-19 virus, we are indeed trading off our privacy for the better good of society in general.
Latest News
New directions, regulations and a Labour Court judgment bring clarity to the mining industry
by Chris Stevens, Director and Head of the Mining, Environmental & Resources practice; Kathleen Louw, Director; Bronwyn Parker, Senior Associate; [...]
As little as possible infringement? Is this the case when thinking about the right to privacy in South Africa?
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of the Data Privacy practice A year back there would have been a massive [...]
Some more exemptions from Competition Law during the pandemic
Competition Law during the pandemic We have previously reported on the various block exemptions issued by the Minister of Trade, [...]
The impact of COVID-19 on the use of common areas
by Fátima Rodrigues, Director and Head of the Property Law & Real Estate practice (Johannesburg) and Yatheen Ramnath, Candidate Attorney [...]
Cancellations and postponements of dividends
by Kevin Trudgeon, Director; Brian Price, Director; and Raquel Goncalves, Candidate Attorney The COVID-19 outbreak, the subsequent lockdown and other [...]
A jack of all trades or jacking the trades of others: A case of having your fingers burnt in too many pies
National Union of Metal Workers Of South Africa V Lufil Packaging (Isithebe) (A Division Of Bidvest Paperplus (Pty) Limited) (Unreported) [...]
