Human rights and the on-line persona
Posted by William Heath in e-ID at May 28th, 2007
Jaco Aizenman writes
You may want to consider including the human right of having or not virtual personality for the July 9 event?
I’m a bit perplexed by this. Surely “human rights” has a specific meaning, despite the misleading and sloppy usage in Britain by politicians and the media. Human rights are specifically enshrined in law. Is anyone proposing a law about whether or not we have a virtual personality?
Well yes, it seems. In Costa Rica, where Jaco is based, a senior judge called Magistrate Carlos Chinchilla is leading work on taking just such a law through Congress. What’s the thinking behind it? We in the UK might have something to learn from this.

May 28th, 2007 at 7:44 pm
Jaco writes again:
There may be a language issue here Jaco. Here in the UK - weirdly - we don’t have a Constitution, just laws and an accretion of practices. But we DO have human rights legislation (Human Rights Act, based on the European Convention on Human Rights). I’m not a lawyer but I’m pretty sure there’s nothing about virtual personas in that. Which isn’t to say we dont need one…I suspect the Dutch are closest to having checked this out.