Fair Information Practices

Overview#

Fair Information Practices (FIPs) are a set of principles and practices that describe how an information-based society may approach information handling, storage, management, and flows with a view toward maintaining fairness, privacy, and security in a rapidly evolving global technology environment.

United States Department of Health and Human Services#

The first steps toward formally codifying Fair Information Practices began in July 1973, when an advisory committee of the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposed a set of information practices to address a lack of protection under the law at that time. The resulting HEW report, Records, Computers and the Rights of Citizens: report of the Secretary’s Advisory Committee on Automated Personal Data Systems, set forward key foundational ideas for safeguarding privacy. The report stated that "Safeguards for personal privacy based on our concept of mutuality in record-keeping would require adherence by record-keeping organizations to certain fundamental principles of fair information practice".

The fundamental principles the HHS authors articulated are as follows:

These principles should govern the conduct of all personal-data record-keeping systems. Deviations from them should be permitted only if it is clear that some significant interest of the individual data subject, will be served or if some paramount societal interest can be clearly demonstrated; no deviation should be permitted except as specifically provided by law” n 2.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development[1]#

In 1980, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) used these core HEW Fair Information Practices and built upon them to create a set of eight Fair Information Practices codified in the OECD Guidelines on the Protection of Privacy and Transborder Flows of Personal Data. The OECD has historically created internationally-agreed upon codes, practices, decisions, recommendations, and policy instruments. The eight principles OECD published in 1980 were agreed upon by member countries, including the United States, through a consensus and formal ratification process. These OECD guidelines form the basis of many modern international privacy agreements and national laws, and these eight principles from 1980 are referred to by the U.S. Government Accountability Office as key principles for privacy protection n 4.

The Eight Fair Information Practices (From the OECD Guidelines on the Protection of Privacy)

More Information#

There might be more information for this subject on one of the following:

https://aspe.hhs.gov/report/records-computers-and-rights-citizens