Ensuring That Agencies Protect Privacy

In the information age, agencies increasingly collect and process personal information in new ways.

  • The standard in both the private sector and the government has become Internet-based exchanges of information, leading to increased pressure to use electronic information (for example, to implement electronic health records).
  • In the post-9/11 environment, agencies have felt an increasing urgency to access, analyze, and share large amounts of personal information to ensure the security of the homeland.

However, the government’s approach to protecting personal privacy is becoming outdated.

Highlights of GAO-08-536 (PDF)

  • The primary law controlling federal agency privacy-related actions is the Privacy Act, which was passed in 1974.

    • The law was put in place long before current technologies were developed and is now inadequate.
GAO Contact
portrait of Joel C. Willemssen

Joel C. Willemssen

Managing Director, Information Technology

willemssenj@gao.gov

(202) 512-6253