The mission of W3C's PING (PING) is to improve privacy on the Web by advising groups developing standards on how to avoid and mitigate privacy issues with their technologies and by incubating new work that reduces privacy risks and fingerprinting surface area. PING also suggests changes to existing standards and technologies to improve the privacy of existing systems. Finally, PING makes recommendations to the W3C Advisory Committee and the W3C TAG about whether a proposed standard would be beneficial or harmful for privacy on the web.
Start date | TBD |
---|---|
End date | 31 December 2022 |
Confidentiality | Proceedings are public |
Chairs |
Christine Runnegar, Internet Society Peter Snyder, Brave Tara Whalen, Google |
Team Contact (FTE %: 30) |
Samuel Weiler |
Usual Meeting Schedule |
Teleconferences: typically 1-2 per month Face-to-face: Once annually |
The Privacy Interest Group (PING) develops and documents guidelines, patterns, processes and best practices for addressing privacy considerations in Web standards.
PING provides "horizontal review" - offering groups developing web standards on-request guidance on privacy issues and mitigations specific to their technologies. PING aims to offer this review as early in the technology development lifecycle as requested, observing that early feedback is often more helpful. PING may also seek out technologies that might benefit from earlier privacy review and conduct such reviews on its own initiative.
PING incubates standards work on privacy issues by collecting requirements, prototyping, and/or initiating the work within the IG and recommending that the W3C move the work into other groups when appropriate. For example, PING may incubate work to reconcile differences in browser vendors' approaches to privacy-protecting features, potentially to include guidelines, best practices, and standards work.
PING may recommend mitigations for privacy issues found in existing features of the Web platform, up to and including deprecation of the features.
PING may provide input to the W3C Process Community Group on process changes that will improve privacy in Web standards, e.g. by establishing particular requirements on the identification and mitigation of privacy issues in W3C Recommendations.
PING may make recommendations to the W3C Advisory Committee and the W3C TAG regarding the privacy impact of proposed standards.
In conjunction with W3C's Technical Architecture Group (TAG) PING maintains a Self-Review Questionnaire for Security and Privacy.
PING maintains a document providing further detail on Mitigating Browser Fingerprinting in Web Specifications.
PING may publish other documents consistent with the above scope such as analyses of privacy issues, prototype specifications, and guidelines for user interface design and future standards.
It is expected that most Working and Interest Groups will ask PING to review their specifications.
PING will seek horizontal review of its own deliverables for accessibility, internationalization, performance, and security with the relevant Working and Interest Groups and with the TAG.
PING should collaborate with the WICG and TAG to coordinate privacy review of specifications early in their development lifecycle.
PING may collaborate with the W3C Web Advertising Business Group and the WICG on privacy issues related to advertising.
Participation in PING is open to the public. Participants who do not represent a W3C Member should join as Invited Experts. Invited Experts in this group are not granted access to Member-only information.
Anyone may subscribe to the group's public mailing list and engage in discussion. Those who intend to contribute to deliverables will be asked to join the group.
This group conducts its work on the public mailing list public-privacy and in periodic teleconferences, typically 1-2 times per month. Additionally, the group meets face to face at TPAC. PING is experimenting with using a free Slack workspace - interesting discussions from Slack will be called out to the mailing list, and decisions will not be finalized based solely on Slack discussions.
Information about the group (deliverables, participants, face-to-face meetings, teleconferences, etc.) is available from the PING home page.
As explained in the Process Document (section 3.3), this group will seek to make decisions by consensus. When the Chairs put a question and observe dissent, after due consideration of different opinions, the Chairs should record a decision (possibly after a formal vote) and any objections, and move on.
Interest Group participants have an obligation to comply with patent disclosure obligations as set out in Section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy. These obligations apply both to Recommendation-track work incubated in the Interest Group as well as to feedback offered to Working Groups when reviewing their Recommendation-track specifications.
For more information about disclosure obligations for this group, please see the W3C Patent Policy Implementation.
This charter for the Privacy Interest Group has been created according to section 6.2 of the Process Document. In the event of a conflict between this document or the provisions of any charter and the W3C Process, the W3C Process shall take precedence.
On @@ 2019, this charter was significantly revised and extended to 31 December 2022. >
On 1 March, 2018, this charter was extended to 31 December 2018 with an update to the team contact.
On 3 December 2014, this charter was extended to 1 December 2016, with the following adjustments:
On 18 December 2013, this charter was extended to 1 December 2014, with the following additional adjustments:
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$Date: 2019/09/24 15:28:08 $