DocumentCode
2088240
Title
Privacy technology lessons from healthcare
Author
Anderson, Ross J.
Author_Institution
Comput. Lab., Cambridge Univ., UK
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
78
Lastpage
79
Abstract
The probability that information will be abused depends both on its value and on the number of people, who have access. The modern trend to ever larger databases increases both of these risk factors at the same time. Compartmented security policies can solve many of the technical issues, and there are applications such as healthcare where they have been developed in some detail. But the big problem isn´t technical; it is legal and regulatory. Insurers, employers and governments won´t adopt compartmented systems, or will allow them to be adopted only in places such as hospitals which are not where the real threats lie
Keywords
data privacy; government policies; health care; legislation; medical administrative data processing; security of data; compartmented security policies; employers; governments; healthcare; hospitals; information abuse probability; insurers; larger databases; legal issues; privacy technology; risk factors; technical issues; Access control; Data security; Databases; Government; Hospitals; Information security; Laboratories; Medical services; Privacy; Protection;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Security and Privacy, 2000. S&P 2000. Proceedings. 2000 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Berkeley, CA
ISSN
1081-6011
Print_ISBN
0-7695-0665-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SECPRI.2000.848466
Filename
848466
Link To Document