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Woensdag, 5 December, 2007

De leider van de informatie verzoekt overzicht van identiteitskaart- kaartplannen

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Patrick Wintour
De beschermer

De overheid moet de schaal van zijn plannen voor identiteitskaarten in het spoor van de versie van 25 miljoen namen herzien en de adressen op het voordeelverslagen van het overheidskind, de informatiecommissaris, Richard Thomas, vertelden gisteren de rechtvaardigheid uitgezochte commissie. Hij eiste de overheid over de rol van identiteitskaarten verward bleef, en beschuldigde ministers van het zetten van teveel geloof in de waarde van informatie het delen.

Thomas zei: “Any massive collection of information like the identity card carries risk … We still have some uncertainties about what the primary purpose of the identity card is … Is it to improve policing, to fight terrorism, to improve public services, to avoid identity theft? I think there is a lot of thinking still to be done on its primary purpose.”

He added: “Keeping this massive database with records of every time the card is swiped through a terminal is distinctly unattractive and would increase the risks.”

He also questioned whether information on ID cards needed to be kept indefinitely. He disclosed that a stream of organisations in the public and private sectors had come to his office “on a confessional basis” in recent weeks to reveal that they had problems with losing data.

He added that Revenue and Customs’ loss of data “has been a massive wake-up call to the top of organisations”. Chief executives and permanent secretaries were now at long last asking if the proper procedures were in place.

He disclosed he had put in a request for a substantial increase in his £10m annual budget, as well as new criminal sanctions against a data controller who knowingly or recklessly loses data .

None of the £10m comes from government, but from fees for inspections.

Commenting on the HMRC fiasco, he said: “Searching questions need to be answered about systems procedures and human error. I would question whether anybody should be allowed to download an entire database of this scale without going through the most rigorous pre-authorisation checks. One would want to question why software was not in place to be prevent the entire database being downloaded.”

Thomas, who is responsible for data protection as well as freedom of information, reiterated his call for powers to allow the Information Commission to make spot checks so it could go into private companies, as well as government departments, to inspect data security arrangements without permission.

The prime minister is reluctant to give the commissioner powers to enter private companies without permission.

“We have been dissatisfied for some time that we only have limited powers of scrutiny,” said Thomas. “I find that a very bizarre situation, which is unlike virtually all the other data protection authorities around the world and most other regulatory bodies, such as the Financial Services Authority”.

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  • This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 5th, 2007 at 6:42 am and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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