Privacy fears spark UK website censure

Information Commissioner threatens legal action against directory site...

By Will Sturgeon, 4 July 2006 14:35

NEWS

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has ordered a website which provides personal information on UK citizens to stop using data from electoral registers published before 2002.

Although such data on b4usearch.com is out of date, it is still unlawful according to the ICO. This is because prior to 2002 individuals had no say in whether the data held on them on the electoral register was sold on to third parties.

But now the ICO is demanding that information be removed, following around 1,600 complaints from concerned UK residents angered by the fact their names and addresses could be easily searched free of charge, as well as maps to their homes and a list of their neighbours.

According to the ICO, one complaint came from a policeman who expressed concerns about the repercussions of his home address being so readily available.

b4usearch.com does offer to remove personal information from its site, though calls to its helpline to request a same-day removal are charged at £1.50 per minute.

An enforcement notice issued by the ICO said: "Following an investigation, the ICO found that the personal information used by the website did not comply with the first principle of the Data Protection Act... that all personal information should be processed fairly and lawfully."

However, Ravindar Singh Banga, a director at b4u.co.uk, operator of b4usearch.com, told silicon.com that he had not seen any such note from the ICO, only a copy forwarded by silicon.com.

He said: "Once we have had an opportunity to see paperwork direct from the ICO the matter will be considered by our in-house legal advisor and we will respond to the ICO at the earliest opportunity.

"We have always followed correct procedure and will ensure that our data processing and display remains within the law. We will of course co-operate with the ICO."

A spokeswoman for the ICO said if the demands of the enforcement notice are not met then b4u will be open to prosecution under the DPA.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    After reading this article, I searched for me and found an entry, albeit with an outdated postcode. There is a "remove my record" link below the entry, upon which I clicked. Guess what happened? "The web site you are accessing has experienced an unexpected error.
    Please contact the website administrator"
    Presumably at £1.50 a minute!

  2. 2. Tim

    I have tried to unsubscribe from this outfit several times with no result. There is no way I will fax them and let them make a profit that way. Their unsubscribe link wants to COLLECT more data.

    No way.

    This guy is wriggling. There is no way an enforcement notice can be "lost in the post".

    I will give him a couple of days and then add my own name to the complaint, but will be complaining that he has not removed my details despite the enforcement notice. Complaining is easy. Just go to http://www.ico.gov.uk/eventual.aspx?id=16318 and go for it

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ