Picture of Richard Thomas, Information Commissioner
Thomas: substantial dangers if information sharing becomes a free-for-all
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
Jargon Buster

ADVERTISEMENT

Watchdog wants more power

Information Commission wants to get tougher with those who break data protection laws

Tom Young, Computing 22 Nov 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

Information Commissioner Richard Thomas has submitted formal proposals to the Ministry of Justice to make data protection violations a criminal offence.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) is also calling for more power to inspect government organisations without their consent.

The ever-growing extent of personal information flowing around the public and private sector needs to be more carefully regulated, according to Thomas.

“The amount of data about each of us that is being shared is staggering. There are substantial dangers if it becomes a free-for-all,” he said.

The ICO has campaigned to extend its remit since Thomas took over in 2002.

But the database explosion of recent years is only part of the reason. Technological developments have also complicated the debate. The national DNA database is a case in point.

When the enabling legislation was last reviewed in 2003, obtaining and retaining genetic profiles was expensive. But technical advances have pushed down the cost and the database now holds DNA samples from more than five per cent of the population.

Future implications were missed when the initial law was passed, said Thomas.

“There has not been as much scrutiny of legislation as I would like to see,” he said. “We now have a situation where there are more DNA profiles on the database than anyone contemplated when the law was going through.”

Plans for joined-up government, with departments and agencies sharing data to make public services more efficient, also need attention. But because the ICO is an independent office, it is sometimes out of the Whitehall loop, said Thomas.

“Information sharing in the public sector is not a panacea and data should not be shared by default. We need to be involved from the start,” he said.

In the private sector, advances in data mining technology are also having a big impact.

A cultural shift is needed to ensure data is not mined unnecessarily, said surveillance expert David Murikami-Wood from Newcastle University. “It is about engendering a change of mindset, similar to the one we underwent five years ago with regard to environmental damage,” he said.

“Unwarranted mining and analysis of data without check is not acceptable. Small things such as privacy impact assessments can build up and would lead to better scrutiny.”

Murikami-Wood said the Information Commissioner needs more power because parliament and Whitehall are not sufficiently technically-minded to judge the issues properly.

“The ICO could help provide ethical foresight, as happens in the medical profession, so issues are debated before changes happen,” he said.

Tags: Government, Communications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
C# Web Developer, Finance, London Financial Services Required: C#, ASP.NET, AJAX Fantastic opportunity not to be missed!! This is a great opportunity to work on a unique objectives that no other company is doing working ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
Senior Hardware Engineer Scotland/Edinburgh Communication Systems Permanent Position 40-45K+Benefits A leading organisation involved with the design and development of data acquisition systems and synthesis boards for a range of radar, signal intelligence and software radio ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
FPGA Engineer Defence/Safety Critical Buckinghamshire Permanent Position 45K+Benefits A leading UK defence organisation requires an experienced digital design engineer to strengthen its existing development team due to a number of long-term projects that have recently ... more >
| JAM Recruitment
DSP Engineer 3 Months Contract Hertfordshire £Excellent Rates£ This position requires you to have experience of measurement algorithms development for the generation and analysis of digital wireless communication standards including GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN and ... more >
More job opportunities