사단법인 오픈넷은 망사업자에게 부여되는 중립성 의무를 플랫폼사업자에게도 부여하는 전기통신사업법 시행령(대통령령 제27750호, 2016.12.30., 일부개정)에 대하여 아래와 같이 반대의견을 제시한다.
망중립성은 주파수라는 공공재를 사용하는 망사업자에게 적용되는 원칙이다.
망중립성은 망사업자가 망을 이용하는 이용자(end user)의 행위를 차별하여서는 안 된다는 규범으로서, 망사업자의 게이트키핑 역할을 제한하여 이용자나 부가통신사업자가 인터넷상에서 다양한 기기나 콘텐츠를 이용할 수 있어야 인터넷이 창출하는 소비자 편익이 극대화될 수 있다는 취지에서 만들어졌다. 특히 우리나라는 망사업자들이 과점적 지위를 가지고 있어, 이들의 자의적인 차별로 인하여 부가통신사업자의 혁신이 가로막히고 이에 따라 이용자 편익도 훼손될 우려가 매우 크다. 따라서 어느 국가보다 엄격한 망중립성 규제가 요구된다.
망사업자에 대한 전기통신사업법의 엄격한 사전 규제 부과는 이들이 공공재인 주파수를 사용하는 기간통신사업자이기 때문에 정당화된다. 그러나 전기통신사업법 개정 시행령은 인터넷의 구조나 공공재 이용 여부를 고려하지 않고 망사업자(기간통신사업자)와 망 위에서 서비스를 제공하는 일반 부가통신사업자를 구분없이 동일하게 취급하고 있어 아래와 같은 문제를 야기한다.
기계적 중립성 추구로 표현의 자유 등 플랫폼 이용자의 기본권 위축 우려
시행령의 해석상 중립성 의무가 부여되는 플랫폼사업자는 정보통신망법상 부가통신사업자로서, 원칙적으로 전기통신사업법의 사전 규제 대상이 아니다. 이들은 이른바 ‘정보매개자’로서의 책임을 지고 있으며, 정보매개자의 책임은 지난 2015년 3월 제정된 “정보매개자 책임에 관한 마닐라 원칙(Manila Principles)”에서 국제적으로 논의된 바 있다. 이에 따르면 플랫폼사업자는 자신이 인지하지 않은 불법정보에 대해서는 책임을 지지 아니하며, 인지한 불법정보에 대해서도 법적 판단이 있는 경우에만 삭제 및 차단 의무를 갖게 된다.
시행령의 중립성 의무는 피해자의 요청이 없어도 사업자들이 사전적으로 “중립적인” 서비스를 제공할 의무와 합법적인 정보를 삭제하거나 차단할 의무를 의미하는 것이라서 마닐라 원칙에 위배될 뿐 아니라, 콘텐츠 유통과 관련된 정부의 사적 검열 기제로 기능할 수 있다. 결국 플랫폼사업자의 서비스를 이용하는 이용자의 알 권리와 표현의 자유 역시 개정 시행령의 기계적 중립 의무에 의해 침해될 우려가 매우 큰 것이다.
망중립성 문제는 망중립성 강화법으로 풀고 플랫폼사업자의 공정거래 이슈는 공정거래법으로 풀어야
이미 망사업자에 대한 망중립성 규제를 분명히 한 유승희 의원 대표발의 전기통신사업법 개정안(일명 망중립성 강화법)이 국회에 상정되어 있다. 망중립성을 강화하는 것이 전기통신사업법 개정 시행령의 주된 목적이라면, 이미 발의되어 있는 망중립성 강화법을 통해 그 목적을 충분히 달성할 수 있다.
반면 플랫폼사업자에 대한 사전 규제는 기본권 침해 우려가 매우 크므로, 플랫폼사업자에 의한 경쟁법 위반 사안은 공정거래법으로 규율하면 된다. 오히려 공정거래위원회가 정보통신 분야와 관련한 공정거래 이슈에 지나치게 소극적인 것이 문제라면 공정거래위원회의 전문성을 강화하는 방법으로 해결해야 할 것이다.
- 김가연 변호사 발표 내용:
KELLY KIM: This discussion on the right to be forgotten is very important especially in Korea, as the Korean Communication Commission, which is FCC of Korea, is considering adopting a right-to-be-forgotten law since the ECJ decision Google Spain came out. It hasn’t been particularly successful yet, but we are worried that we might become the first country to have the right to be forgotten statute, on top of rigorous online censorship carried out by an administrative agency called the Korea Communications Standard Commission which is taking many lawful contents down whenever it’s “necessary for nurturing sound communication ethics.” a standard as vague and amorphous as the standards used by the Google Spain decision: ‘excessive’, ‘obsolete’, ‘irrelevant’.
Data Protection law in general defines “personal Information” as information related to a living individual and gives the data subject the power to control his or her personal data. A tenet that “one owns data about him or her (and therefore should have control over that data)” sounds good but is not always sustainable and compatible with respect for others’ freedom of thoughts and expressions. For example, “Kelly Kim is a lawyer” is data about me that is known to many already. And the question is, when and under what grounds can I control this perfectly lawful data about myself, that resides in other people’s heads, that is non-defamatory and non-privacy-infringing?
Well, the Google Spain case was one answer to that Question, which we consider more or less lousy. One reason is that the information deindexed, which was a hyperlink, was already publicly available data, which was published in the newspaper. So applying data protection law on such information is against its original purpose, because the data protection law was meant to protect data that are not publicly available and thus within the privacy area. We wanted to protect privacy through a data protection law. We should not protect people’s desire to wipe out unfavorable or embarrassing information about themselves.
Let me give you an example on how the right to be forgotten can be abused.
Korea became independent of a 36-year Japanese colonial rule in 1948. Many Korean people collaborated with the colonial administration and exploited their fellow Koreans.The issue is current because, unlike Germany or France, there has been no government-sponsored efforts to indict and bring to justice those collaborators who number in tens of thousands. And many were not public figures during the colonial periods and they have never been. Some of them were the officers or civic servants who carried out the military logistics and tactics of the Japanese invasion through Asia, which reached as far as Myanmar. And now there is an NGO-led effort to keep the encyclopedia of these Korean collaborators. Of course, the collaborators and the descendants are contesting these efforts. So, in this case, if the right to be forgotten law in the sense of Google Spain is in place, any links to the encyclopedia or the entries themselves may be required to be taken down for the reason that their past wrongdoings are now obsolete because it was more than half a century ago.
So we should stop talking data ownership and start talking about privacy. And the right to be forgotten should not be applied to data that are publicly available, although it’s about an individual. Thanks.
참여세션 2: WS60 ICT 기업의 디지털 인권 순위 측정(Benchmarking ICT companies on Digital Rights)
- 김가연 변호사 발표 내용:
KELLY KIM: This discussion on right to be forgotten or the right to be de-indexed is important for Korea as Korean government and the Korean Communication Commission, which is the U.S.’s FCC of Korea is considering adopting a right-to-be-forgotten law since the ECJ decision Google Spain came out. However, it hasn’t been particularly successful yet because right to be forgotten in a broad sense is very widely recognized in Korea already.
Firstly, we already have a law under which an individual can compel intermediaries to take down information that is allegedly defamatory or infringing on privacy. And what makes this law similar to the right to be forgotten is that information is required to be taken down simply upon allegation short of any proof of infringement. So every year, more than 200,000 postings are being taken down by the intermediaries, simply for a reason that that data subjects do not like the postings about them. Marianne just mentioned stats from Google that last year like 228,000 requests were received. So you can tell how bad the situation is in Korea. and that means we have that many individual cases that year.
Secondly, we also have an administrative agency called the Korea Communications Standard Commission, which exercises rigorous online censorship. Korea Communications Standard Commission is empowered by the law to make takedown requests on even lawful contents, whenever it is “necessary for nurturing sound communication ethics.” Any lawful content can be taken down by the Korea Communications Standard Commission if it violates the standard. This is a standard as vague and amorphous as the standards used by the Google Spain decision: which are ‘excessive’, ‘obsolete’, ‘irrelevant’.
Thirdly, we have criminal defamation law that punishes even non-privacy infringing, truthful statements, which allows a data subject not only to request takedown but also to criminally punish others for saying bad but true statements about him or her.
And fourthly and finally, you also have data protection law that may or may not give a data subject a blanket authority to demand data erasure about him or her. Well, apparently there aren’t many such requests made, so we don’t have a court case yet.
I just want to underline that if we limit right to be forgotten only to de-indexing from the search, okay, we don’t have any case yet. However, we don’t need a such right in Korea because there are many legal tools that I just illustrated that are used to expunge online information that you don’t like.
So we want to protect privacy through data protection law. We should not protect people’s desire to wipe out unfavorable or embarrassing information about themselves. Think about a word where only favorable or delightful information about a person lasts. I don’t want to live in that world. Thank you.
○ 11월 12일 목요일(Day 3)
참여세션: WS169 인터넷 관측소 설립: 접근법과 도전(Building Internet Observatories: approaches and challenges)
- 주최:
Diego R. Canabarro / Carlos Affonso de Souza – Brazilian Internet Observatory, Multistakeholder Initiative
- 김가연 변호사 발표 내용:
KELLY KIM: Open Net is a Civil Society Organization fighting for digital rights in Korea. We are supporting the Korea Internet Transparency Report project, which is very well staffed as we have one full‑time lawyer. The methodology of the project is, we gather all legally available data on government requests related to internet transparency, which are online censorship and surveillance. And then we analyse the data and present observations and findings in accessible form and you will find them on the website. PDF version of our report is also available.
And the sources of the data are varied from government to private companies. And the aim of the project is: promoting civic awareness of online censorship and surveillance carried out by the government; promoting transparency reporting of both the government and private companies; and raising issues and making the public aware of the problems associated with the government’s practices and policies of Internet censorship and surveillance, and in the end, bring about changes.
So the project launched last year. And interestingly, two major Internet companies in Korea, which are Daumkakao and Naver, started to publish transparency reports in few months. So we considered it a great achievement and we also proposed a Bill together with National Assembly members mandating Government’s transparency reporting on mass surveillance.
And also we are involved in Stanford’s WILmap project in building South Korea page. And the map has been very useful in our advocacy for fixing intermediary regime in Korea. I must say we have been integrating the data and observations with our actions in promoting user rights on the Internet very effectively. Thank you.
○ 11월 13일 금요일
참여 세션: WS 242 정보매개자 책임에 관한 마닐라원칙(The Manila Principles on Intermediary Liability)
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