Under the current regulatory framework for data protections, the protection
of human rights writ large and the corresponding outcomes are regulated largely
independently from the data and tools that both threaten those rights and are
needed to protect them. This separation between tools and the outcomes they
generate risks overregulation of the data and tools themselves when not linked
to sensitive use cases. In parallel, separation risks under-regulation if the
data can be collected and processed under a less-restrictive framework, but
used to drive an outcome that requires additional sensitivity and restrictions.
A new approach is needed to support differential protections based on the
genuinely high-risk use cases within each sector. Here, we propose a regulatory
framework designed to apply not to specific data or tools themselves, but to
the outcomes and rights that are linked to the use of these data and tools in
context. This framework is designed to recognize, address, and protect a broad
range of human rights, including privacy, and suggests a more flexible approach
to policy making that is aligned with current engineering tools and practices.
We test this framework in the context of open banking and describe how current
privacy-enhancing technologies and other engineering strategies can be applied
in this context and that of contract tracing applications. This approach for
data protection regulations more effectively builds on existing engineering
tools and protects the wide range of human rights defined by legislation and
constitutions around the globe.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure