By Nick Heath, 1 April 2008 16:47
NEWS
The UK's information watchdog has issued a stark warning to the government not to water down laws which could jail people selling stolen personal details.
Pressure is building on parliament to quash part of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill that would mean those buying or selling data would face prison (clause 76).
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has said it is vital the government resists pressure to withdraw clause 76 as the bill passes through parliament.
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas said that responsible media should not fear that the legislation would block the release of information in the public interest.
An ICO spokesman said: "We want to deter people from the illegal buying and selling of data."
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Thomas said in a statement: "There has been widespread support for the government's decision to strengthen the law and - if data protection is to be taken seriously - it is vital the government and other parties should stand firm against any possible amendments.
"If there is a change of heart on legislation aimed at deliberate security breaches, the government will find it hard to convince people that measures aimed at preventing data loss need to be taken seriously."
The ICO has already called for reckless data loss to be made a criminal offence.
Recent reports of government data losses include the loss of three laptops by the Ministry of Defence containing personal details of 600,000 recruits, the NHS losing hundreds of thousands of patients' records, and HMRC's loss of 25 million child benefit recipients' details.


Comments
There are 3 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
could it be argued that selling our details to a third party amounts to theft unless we give our explicit permission
I don't remember being asked if my information could be used in this way and I definitely had an expectation that my details would be kept private
it would certainly make an interesting court case, it could even set a precedent
it might even tread on the toes of the NIR as that would be a lot less attractive if our details couldn't be sold on without our permission
well I can dream
2. Karen Challinor
damn! I forgot
government departments are specifically exempt from the data protection act aren't they
3. Charles Smith
The UK Gov't is the worst offender when it comes to the protection of personal data from IT systems.
Rather that watering down the laws relating to Data Protection there should be heavy fines and stiff penalties for Gov't managers showing negligence in Data Protection.
As the revenue collection arms of the government might say "ignorance of the law is no defence". Formal data protection rules/guidelines have been around since the 1980's and earlier.