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26 October 2007
UK government to investigate data-sharing schemes
Ian Grant, Computer Weekly
The government has set up an independent commission to see whether
present public and private sector data-collection and sharing schemes
go too far towards invading individual's privacy.
Richard Thomas, the information commissioner, and Mark Walport,
director of the Wellcome Trust, will head the investigation. They
have still to agree their terms of reference. They are expected
to report to the justice secretary, Jack Straw, at the end of June
2008.
A spokesman for the Information Commissioner's Office said the
aim was to balance the individual's right to privacy against the
efficiencies that data-sharing create.
He said the investigation was needed because the public sector
has collected "vast amounts" of data about people, and
that private sector bodies such as banks and Tesco were doing the
same.
He said the ICO had published a framework guideline in October
that helped firms decided what data they could share and when. "This
investigation will tell us what more we might need to do, and what
extra powers the ICO needs," he said.
The ICO will host a conference on "Surveillance Society: Turning
Debate into Action" at Manchester's Bridgewater Hall on 11
December 2007. It will launch a handbook on "Privacy Impact
Assessments" at the conference.
This article first appeared on the web-site of Computer Weekly,
at http://www.computerweekly.com//Articles/2007/10/26/227740/government-to-investigate-data-sharing-schemes.htm.
© Reed Business Information 2007.

ICO issues new guidance on
data-sharing (11 October 2007)
UK state data-sharing lacks
adequate security (7 August 2007)
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