The average British adult unknowingly has their personal details recorded on
around 700 databases with many different organisations, according to one
thinktank.
In its report,
Demos
said people are losing control of how many organisations hold their
personal data because they “are willing to give away information in exchange for
the conveniences and benefits they get in return”.
As well as Government databases such as the
Home
Office's National DNA database, the report,
FYI:
The New Politics of Personal Information, said other organisations gather
people's personal data, such as supermarkets who offer loyalty cards to
customers.
The report said handing over information needed to get these cards seems like
a good idea to people at the time, as they offer benefits and discounts. But
Demos warned it was just another way of gathering information and tracking
people’s movements and lifestyles.
“There is a disconnect between people’s standard concerns about privacy and
Big
Brother on the one hand and, on the other, their willingness to be part of a
world to which surveillance of some form is fundamental,” Demos said.
The thinktank said although people had an individual responsibility to take
care of personal data, the Government had a big part to play. Demos called for
it to develop a more coherent strategy on data gathering and protection and give
more powers to the Information Commissioner. It also says organisations in the
private sector should also be more open about the personal information they
collect and why they do this.
Demos also raised concerns about ID cards saying the Government should either
launch a “serious renewed debate” with meaningful engagement with the public
about how the technology should work, or scrap the scheme completely.
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