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Information newsletter
Issue 3(15), March 2005
The annual Big Brother anti-awards
presented in Bulgaria
Press-release by AIP
Access to Information Programme Foundation and Internet Society Bulgaria
presented the annual Big Brother anti-awards for the violation
of the right to privacy and the protection of personal data at an official
ceremony in the The Red HouseCenter for Culture and Debate
on 13 April 2005.
The award Big Brother was founded by Privacy Internationala
human rights group working for the protection of privacy. Big Brother
awards are bestowed to these institutions, which directly or by establishing
requirements and rules, seriously violate peoples privacy and the
right to protection of personal data. The symbol of the anti-award is
a military boot smashing a human head.
In Bulgaria, three anti-awards were bestowed in the following
categories:
State institution that seriously violates the right
of the citizens to personal data protection
The Council of Ministers received the negative prize in the category for
the draft amendments of the Personal Data Protection Act. The motives
of the jury to distinguish the institution as the winner were that the
draft brought by the Vice-premier Plamen Panayotov would set restrictions
to the right to freedom of information and would give exclusive power
to the so called force institutions to uncontrollably use
personal data.
The amendments would:
Bring to the reposition of the provision that allows disclosure of information
about public figures;
Restrict the collection and distribution of information related to crimes
and administrative offences to the control of the respective competent
authorities;
Give permission to the employers to collect the so called sensitive
personal data, i.e. data that show racial or ethnic origin, religious
or philosophical belonging, political bias, as well as data related to
the health and sexual life of the citizens.
Public figure
The General Prosecutor Nikola Filchev was awarded for the overall activity
of the Prosecutors Office, particularly for a series of actions
that pose a threat to the freedom of information and the protection of
personal data:
The indictment against the journalists from the BBC television because
of their documentary Buying the Games. The movie exhibited
the corruption of some of the members of the International Olympic Committee;
The indictment against the Rumanian journalist George Buhnich for his
findings about breaches at the border shops at the Danube Bridge. He used
intercept devices;
The order of the Plovdiv Appealing Prosecutors Office to collect
personal data from all customers of computer internet clubs at the town,
as well as the time of using the computer.
Private company
The negative prize was given to the advertising company SIA Advertising
for misusing the data of 15,000 applicants for participation in the reality
show Big Brother. The company used the information, contained
in the questionnaires that the applicants had filled during the casting
process. These data should have been destroyed after the closing of the
casting. In the meantime, it turned out that the company used the data
for other purposes, an act that contradicts the Personal Data Protection
Act.
Complete information about the 2004 annual awards, as well as the nominations
are accessible at:
http://bg.bigbrotherawards.org
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