The Privacy Challenge in the ‘Smart Era’: A Study of The
Implementation of E-Government in Surabaya
Masitoh Indriani
1
and Ekawestri Prajwalita Widiati
2
1
Department of International Law, Faculty of Law Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
2
Department of Constitutional Law, Faculty of Law Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
Keywords: E-Government, Data Protection, Privacy, Surveillance, Technology.
Abstract: As the concept of smart city is globally trending, Surabaya, the second biggest city in Indonesia, has
adopted those concepts in the form of e-government. Surabaya has been introducing smart city concept to
involve citizen in monitoring in its public services including the budgeting process, monitoring on officials
training, traffic management, quick response management, urban planning, e-health and many more. In the
implementation of e-government, e-readiness becomes important to measure the quality of information used
over infrastructures, business, government and citizen as a user to enjoy the benefit. As a result the use of
surveillance technology is a must. Afterwards, the debate in using such technology is rising. Although the
use of surveillance technology is not a new thing in the implementation of e-government, it is still
questionable whether the right to privacy is disrupted or strengthened. This paper arrives at a conclusion that
the excess of surveillance technology should consider human rights holder as subject of development rather
than mere passive recipient of service.
1 INTRODUCTION
In this Information Era, the concept of Smart city is
recently a new phenomenon due to the city
development. The concept has developed and
focused on new policies in urban planning along
with the using of Information, Communication and
Technology (ICT). There are previously many
studies on smart city from urban planning, public
policy, administration environmental, sociology and
technology.
There should have at least three main pillars on
smart city: infrastructure, human capital and
information managed by certain organization or
department(Tuba Bakici, 2013). Infrastructure
applied in smart city ranging from physic such as
road, buildings up to artificial intelligence and data
analytics such as cyber infrastructure or cyber
layers. Human capital and organization represents on
how smart city managed in such way to increase city
welfare.
The concept of smart city is generally a city that
is considerably capable of managing its resources
effectively and efficiently, by carrying out
innovative, integrated, and sustainable solutions and
providing services and supporting infrastructure to
improve the welfare of its citizens. In addition, a
smart city is essentially a complex framework
surrounding connected objects and technology lead
to produce data to the cloud where intelligence is
managed and analysed to help organization or
management to make better decisions and improve
citizens’welfare (IOT Magazine, 2017).
Furthermore, the issue of big data would also
contribute to complexity of the smart city studies.
Following to the issue on privacy and the
complexity of big data because of the smart city
technology, there would be concerned on how
actually the privacy might be invaded by
surveillance system. As argued by Kurbalija, the
invasion of privacy itself would by caused by
individuals, states and business sector (Kurbalija,
2014).
Surveillance in smart city refers to the
behaviour’s monitoring, activities and other
changing information for the purpose of influencing,
managing, directing or protecting people (Lyon,
2001). Furthermore, surveillance aims at observing
certain object from a distance (Maximino, 2014) like
the use of CCTV or information and communication
interception. Indeed, privacy issue would be the
main issue due to ICT’s involvement as a result of
Indriani, M. and Widiati, E.
The Privacy Challenge in the â
˘
AŸSmart Eraâ
˘
A
´
Z: A Study of the Implementation of e-Government in Surabaya.
DOI: 10.5220/0007548606410644
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference Postgraduate School (ICPS 2018), pages 641-644
ISBN: 978-989-758-348-3
Copyright
c
2018 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
641
the surveillance activity although the concept of
privacy itself might vary as privacy determined by
social and national cultural value. Some will
consider privacy is more important but other may
consider it less importance (Kurbalija, 2014).
Undeniably, in the context of smart city, surveillance
technology is commonly used to monitor daily
activity the citizen and its surrounding. The
surveillance system creates certain data in big
volume or massively known as big data.
Meanwhile, to create those smart city, enhancing
the e-Government plays a significant role since the
system of e-Government would connect people,
data, things and process under one single dynamic
global infrastructure. In addition, one of key
activities of smart city can be identified by providing
smart governance through e-Government system. In
this context, e-Government might improve to
achieve good governance specifically for increasing
transparency and accountability. e-Government also
increases community participation to strengthen the
existing democratic system.
There are at least five standards to develop e-
Government system that should meet the
requirements, namely: reliable, interoperable,
scalable, user friendly, and integrate-able (Indonesia,
2004). Reliable, this standard requires that the
application system will run reliably against data
entry errors, the changes on operating system and
bug free. Interoperable, this is to ensure that the
application system will be able to communicate with
other system and able to exchange some data and
information. User friendly, this will ensure that
operation of the application system will be easy for
the user which provides common interface and
adjusted to the users. Lastly, integrate-able will
ensure that the application system has certain
features to integrate with other application systems,
specifically for conducting data and information
exchange between e-Government application
systems, both within the scope of local governments.
In Indonesia, Presidential Instruction No. 3 of
2003 sets out the mandate of the development of e-
Government on National Policy and Strategy for
Developing E-Government (Inpres). The Inpres
states that the development of e-Government is one
of the government's efforts in improving the quality
of public services in various public sectors
effectively and efficiently.
Surabaya, the second biggest city in Indonesia,
succeeded to implement smart city in the form of e-
Government. Surabaya’s e-Government divided into
two main services: the community services and
theregional development planning and management
processes. The community services consists five
clusters ranging from license service, education,
budgeting and procurement (e-Government
Surabaya, 2017).
However, there are certain areas needed to
discuss whether or not the implementation of smart
city will enhance the efficiency and effectiveness on
its service. On the other hand, the surveillance
created by the system will simply invade the citizen
privacy or help for increasing the need of the
security.
This paper is trying to discuss the legal aspect on
the implementation of smart city by portraying the
excess of technology used by smart city happening
in the existing regulation of Surabaya local
government, focussing on the perspective of the
right to privacy.
2 SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM IN
SMART ERA: ENHANCING
EFFICIENCY OR INVADING
PRIVACY
The adopted ICT system of smart city has to do with
city infrastructure, operation and activities. To run
the infrastructure, smart city relies on data in a
massive volume (big data). CCTV, microphones,
sensors are few examples on how the management
to collect such data. The collected data is used
laterto analyse the daily behaviour of the citizen and
its surrounding. This action is possibly alleged as
surveillance.
As It is argued by Lyon, surveillance study is
part of watching the human behaviour (Lyon, 2001).
Therefore there should be a question addressed to
how the citizen respond over those authority’s
control. Surveillance, however, should requires
certain elements such as 1) availability; this element
ensuring reliable access of information used by the
smart city authority since it is impossible to collect
data without reliable on the access to data;
2)integrity; the data should be reliable and accurate;
3)confidentiality; the surveillance system should
ensure the process of collecting, storing and
analysing. The authorized management or
organization will guarantee that the data is treated in
confidential manner; 4) considering the fact that the
operation of ICT might involve many actions, the
idea of accountability essential that users of a system
should be responsible for each step of the actions
they perform(Solove, 2008).
Based on the elements described above, big data
as the main product permits the authority to allow
government or authority to improve public sector
ICPS 2018 - 2nd International Conference Postgraduate School
642
administration and assists global organization in
analysing information to develop strategic planning
(Polonetsky, 2013). As a result, over and inaccurate
personalization to certain data caused by the system
allow to display images to identify fugitives, missing
persons and persons of interest. Yet, there’s always
changing on physical appearance of individual.
Violation occurs when there is an absence of data
protection principles for acquisitioning the data
(Paripurna, et al., 2018). Furthermore, the violation
often occurs when there is a misuse on limited
access of individual in the public sphere in which the
individual might have no control over their own
personal information. This also highlighted by
Posner that this becomes a tool to conceal
information about themselves that others might use
to their advantages (Posner, 1983).
Therefore, it is clear that the surveillance system
might threat citizens’ privacy. Privacy defined as the
control over personal information, yet to decide or to
disclose personal information (Pan, 2016). In line
with that, Solove also highlighted that privacy has
been interpreted widely as the right of a person to
choose seclusion from the attention of others, if they
wish to choose so, also the right to be immune from
scrutiny or being observed in private setting (Solove,
2008). While the smart city is equipped with the data
produced by its surveillance system, the legal
perspective on privacy is determined by the control
of individual to maintain his personal information
from collecting, processing, sharing, retaining or
even manipulating data (Paripurna, et al., 2018).
Moreover, privacy has been considerably a part
of fundamental rights acknowledged in international
legal framework as one rights to be promoted,
protected, and fulfilled by the government.
Consequently, in regard to implementing smart city
as such, the protection over the citizen privacy
should take a place in the first account.
3 HUMAN RIGHTS
PERSPECTIVE TO DEVELOP
IT-BASED SERVICES
An interesting experience once took a place when a
citizen apply for a passport to the immigration
office. To get a passport, a citizen should provide at
least four documents (national identity card, birth
certificate, degree certificate, marriage decree and/or
family identification card). The name typed on the
document is asked to be exactly the same name. In
that occasion, the citizen’s name at the national
identity card (KTP) was a single space different with
the name at the birth certificate. The citizen then
went to the local civil registration bureau of
Surabaya to ask for a letter of proof that the
discrepancy on the documents consisting name are
both valid. Surabaya has applied e-government
system processed this issue through the system and
provided the letter within three days. The citizen
then brought the letter to immigration office to
complete the application. Unfortunately, the letter of
proof issued by the bureau was rejected by the
immigration office because it was signed
electronically. They argued that the regulations
stated that documents should be original in wet
stamped and signed. For that reason, the citizen
should start the administrative procedure at the
beginning; apply for correcting name on KTP and
family identification card. It takes much time about a
month; then re-apply for a passport for other two
weeks.
The fact proves that the implementation of IT-
based government hindered long established
problem related to organization and bureaucracy.
Regarding this, Surabaya city through Mayor
Instrument Number 5 of 2013 concerning guidelines
for the use of information and communication
technology in the implementation of local
government taking into account at least four main
obstacles which are; firstly, there is a lack of
openness to allow the user to understand as well as
monitor the progress of the service process;
secondly, organizational work pattern that are mostly
sectoral; It is difficult to integrate and standardized
public services provided by different government
sectors because they might be has different line of
delegation; there are also a strong bureaucratic rules
that require face-to-face between users and service
providers in many stages of the service process;
again there is strict provisions of the availability of
physical documents beginning of the process
services that cause long delivery and distribution
process documents for evaluation purposes; and
lastly, there is a weak feedback mechanism and
methods use to evaluate each activity to ensure the
accountability of service delivery (Rights, 2006).
E-Government is defined as the process of
utilizing ICT as a tool to improve the efficiency and
quality of public services and government
management. E-Government basically affects two
aspects at once; device or procedures to manage
source of information, also public or society that is
the recipient of services. Consequently, development
of e-government should not merely mind the
sophistication of the application of technology but
also taking human rights into consideration in all
sequence.
The Privacy Challenge in the â
˘
AŸSmart Eraâ
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A
´
Z: A Study of the Implementation of e-Government in Surabaya
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It is also found that in the IT-based service
delivery, the government still relies on the third
parties. For this reason it is crucial to consider in
which sequence of the process that might violate the
rights holder. Being that, the regulation concerning
data protection, data sharing and data owned are still
incomplete. Correspondingly, local government
should be extra careful when they develop smart city
system.
In the perspective of human rights, it is
essentially important to check whether or not e-
government system aware of some good practices
includes; whether the people are recognized as key
actors in their own development, rather than passive
recipients of commodities and services; whether the
programmes focus on marginalized, disadvantaged,
and excluded groups; and whether the programmes
aim to reduce disparity. Human rights-based
approach can be used as parameters to evaluate the
process. Human rights-based approach is a
conceptual framework for the process of human
development that is normatively based on
international human rights standards and
operationally directed to promoting and protecting
human rights. It seeks to analyse inequalities which
lie at the heart of development problems and redress
discriminatory practices and unjust distributions of
power that impede development progress.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The implementation of e-government is expected to
improve the quality of citizens’ lifeto ease the
citizen to access the information so that it meet the
citizens’ informationright and to build a more
transparent governance practices. Furthermore, E-
Government offers effectiveness and efficiency in
the delivery of public services such as cutting
licensing bureaucracy together with facilitating
coordination between government agencies.
However, the analysis found the fact that in some
manners, the use of technology, including
surveillance, data collecting etc. paper tends to treat
citizen as an object rather than subject as rights-
holders. The excess of surveillance technology that
has been used in smart city might be threatening
privacy in terms of the limitation access over
citizen’s personal information in the public sphere. It
should take into account that smart city is for people
which cannot be determined by algorithms or
system. Besides, that smart city programme is
expected to improve efficiency at the most, the
surveillance systems and its technology should
support the citizen rights which allow them to be
more flourishing through critical thoughts or
ongoing debate, while authority should guarantee the
citizen rights by enabling the sufficient regulation
protecting their rights to control over personal
information.
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