New Australia mobile app development guidelines published
A research conducted by The Office
of the Australian Information Commissioner revealed that six out of every ten Australians
chooses not to use a smartphone app citing concerns about details use. That
concern led to the drafting of new app development guidelines http://www.contadorharrison.com/australias-mobile-apps-guidelines-to-be-released-on-monday/
meant to assist mobile app developers to embed better privacy practices into
their products, and to comply with Australian privacy law. The
Office of the Australian Information Commissioner has now released its mobile privacy
guide for app developers. The privacy commission said it is ultimately in an
app developer’s best interest to build strong privacy protections into their
product. The new guidelines
published on 30th September 2013 demands app developers to
effectively embrace privacy impact assessment for each app they develop and make
the app’s privacy policy easy to find as well use short form notices that are no
longer than a single screen. Developers are also required to tell users what
will happen with their information in real time and developers should only
collect personal information that is required for the app to function. App
developers in Australia are also expected to notify app users on how an app
collects personal information and whether it is likely to disclose that
information outside territories of Australia. Authorities have pinned their
expectations that the guide app developers to entrench a culture of better
privacy practices in their apps thus making their apps to be fully compliant
with Australian privacy law. The guidelines are not clearly advising against
the use of location data.
What even disappointed me more was the information
regarding the guidelines is that apps developers are not bound by the law to
embrace them and the whole process is voluntary and under no obligations is
there a precise guideline recommending an action. The guidelines defer to the
to businesses with an annual turnover of more than $3 million. Australian apps guidelines
recommends best practices in app development thus allowing users to opt in to
the collection or use of their personal information although it does recommend
opt out if opt in is not practicable. The new guidelines means that if apps
developers breach Australian privacy laws they could lead to them having to
change their app or paying compensation to complainant. The incoming Australia
privacy act suggests developers avoid collecting information about a user's
movements and activities through the use of integrated location and movement
sensors unless it relates directly to the app and they have the user's informed
consent. The Australian Communications Consumer Action Network was quoted
in the national media as being optimistic that the new guidelines would clear
the air to app developers handling app user personal information that are
subject to Australian privacy laws.
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