Online publication of court records: circumventing the privacy-transparency trade-off
The open data movement is leading to the massive publishing of court records online, increasing transparency and accessibility of justice, and to the design of legal technologies building on the wealth of legal data available. However, the sensitive nature of legal decisions also raises important pr...
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Zusammenfassung: | The open data movement is leading to the massive publishing of court records
online, increasing transparency and accessibility of justice, and to the design
of legal technologies building on the wealth of legal data available. However,
the sensitive nature of legal decisions also raises important privacy issues.
Current practices solve the resulting privacy versus transparency trade-off by
combining access control with (manual or semi-manual) text redaction. In this
work, we claim that current practices are insufficient for coping with massive
access to legal data (restrictive access control policies is detrimental to
openness and to utility while text redaction is unable to provide sound privacy
protection) and advocate for a in-tegrative approach that could benefit from
the latest developments of the privacy-preserving data publishing domain. We
present a thorough analysis of the problem and of the current approaches, and
propose a straw man multimodal architecture paving the way to a full-fledged
privacy-preserving legal data publishing system. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2007.01688 |