Human rights groups and data protection advocates have argued that the Prime
Minister’s initiative to weaken data protection laws and enable government
agencies to share an individual’s personal details will dramatically invade
privacy.
The government claims that sharing private details between departments will
improve public services and wants to review policies including those on data
protection, which limit information being passed between departments.
Tony Blair wants to ask a specially convened panel of citizens for their
views on changing the data protection law, but
Liberty warned
that relaxing these rules could cause excessive surveillance and data-sharing.
Director Shami Chakrabarti said. “This is an accumulation of our government’s
contempt for our privacy. This half-baked proposal would allow an information
free-for-all within government – ripe for disastrous error, corruption and
fraud.”
As the Data Protection Act now stands, a person's private details can be
accessed only with their consent and cannot be passed from one government
department to another, something the government feels is proving to be an
“obstacle to improving public services”.
"Some individuals can regularly deal with as many as 30 agencies, none of
whom share information on that individual," said Work and Pensions secretary
John Hutton.
The policy review aims to break down barriers between information held on one
person by several government departments. The government claims it is not a move
towards a "Big Brother” state, but critics of the plan are unconvinced.
The
Information
Commissioner's Office (ICO), said: "We all want to see information used to
provide high-quality and efficient public services, but public trust and
confidence may be jeopardised by wholesale or unrestrained sharing of personal
information."
Ross Anderson, professor of security engineers at Cambridge University and
spokesman for the Foundation for information
policy research (FIPR) told Computeractive: “It is interesting that
Tony Blair has recognised that the sharing of data is illegal and the government
does face barriers. This is something we, as an organisation, have been saying
for years.
“In Germany it is illegal for any private information to be shared, but our
government seems to be in bed with the IT industry and keeps pushing for central
information systems.”
The public, he added, has a choice when it comes to sharing their personal
information with the government, especially as laws are already in place to
protect information held on them.
“Consumers should not be bullied into making their records public," said
Anderson.
"Logging on to thebigoptout.org
will provide people with a letter they can send to their GP that tells him they
do not want their medical records posted on the Government’s centralised health
database, which comes into effect this spring,” he added.
In the new policy proposal, members of a citizens' panel will be asked about
the level of customer care they expect from public services.
Within this they will be asked to discuss the "trade-offs" needed, and what
they expect services to do on their behalf to provide them with personalised
services.
They will be asked questions about how much information they assume is
already shared between agencies and how much are they willing to allow.
The deliberative forum was launched on Monday 15th, and will report back to
cabinet in early March.
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