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Our
Privacy Statement
The next decade is a critical period in
the development and articulation of the
individual's right to privacy in American
society and the world.
In Privacy & Freedom,
Alan Westin offers the following definition of
privacy:
"individuals, groups, or
institutions have the right to control, edit,
manage, and delete information about themselves
and decide when, how, and to what extent that
information is communicated to
others."
Using Westin's definition as a beacon, we
are committed to developing technologies that
insure individual rights of privacy are not
trampled for the perceived short-term benefit of
corporate, governmental, and/or marketing
interests. Furthermore, privacy is not just
about hiding information from others, but also
controlling the flow of your personal
information. Your personal data should be your
property and we are developing tools necessary
to help you manage, control, and protect this
property. However, this is an extremely broad
definition of privacy that does not take into
account other societal values.
Sometimes, for example, individual
privacy must be compromised for the public good.
In Privacy in the Information Age,
author Fred Cate offers the following examples:
"What parent would not want to know
if her child's babysitter had been convicted for
child abuse? What store owner would not want to know
whether a clerk was a kleptomaniac? What patient would not want to know
whether his physician had a history of
malpractice? What man or woman would not want to know
if a potential sex partner had a sexually
transmitted disease? What airline would not want to know if
its pilots were subject to epileptic
seizures?"
The answers to these questions, provided
by our government, society, and you, may dictate
that some of your personal data must be made
available. Lumeria will provide the tools to
help you comply with these requirements, but
inevitably, the responsibility will fall upon
the shoulder of the individual. Ultimately,
Lumeria's system will be designed such that even
Lumeria, and its employees, will not have access
to your data without your consent. Consequently,
if your information is subpoenaed by the
government, Lumeria can only turn over garbage,
without your key to decrypt it.
As a general statement of business
policy, the individual's right to privacy
includes the ability to:
- View, in its entirety, the information
collected about its owner
- To delete the information
collected;
- to identify every entity (especially when
that entity comes into contact with the
individual) who has accessed, or has access to,
the information and their stated purpose for
doing so;
- to determine who will and will not have
access to this information
- Derive value from the use of this
information.
Please keep in mind that in any
transaction or conversation with another entity,
the merchant or other party has an equal right
to the transaction's information as you.
Although many transactions can be conducted
anonymously, your right to privacy does not
currently extend to controlling whatever data to
which the other party has acesss unless all
parties involved have previously established an
agreement about how the data can be used.
Finally, as of today, there is an
enormous amount of data about you that exists in
the hands of the government, insurers,
hospitals, banks, publishers, list brokers, and
much, much more that is not currently your
property and you may not be able to control,
manage, or receive any benefit. Unlike Big
Brother in 1984, we cannot change the past, only
the future.
Please send email us at privacy@lumeria.com
with any questions or comments you may have about this Privacy Statement.
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