From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Data Protection Act 1998 (DPA) is a United Kingdom Act of Parliament
which defines a legal basis for handling of information in the United
Kingdom (UK) relating to people living within. It is the main piece of
legislation that governs the protection of personal data
in the UK. Although the Act does not mention privacy,
in practice it provides a way in which individuals can enforce the
control of information about themselves. Most of the Act does not apply
to domestic use,[1]
for example keeping a personal address book. Anyone holding personal
data for other purposes is legally obliged to comply with this Act,
subject to some exemptions. The Act defines eight data protection
principles.
[edit]
Plain-language summary of key principles
This section provides a quick overview of what the Key Principles of
information-handling practice mean. The Key Principles themselves are
discussed below in the context of their definition in law.
- Data may only be used for the specific purposes for which it was
collected.
- Data must not be disclosed to other parties without the consent
of the individual whom it is about, unless there is legislation or
other overriding legitimate reason to share the information (for
example, the prevention or detection of crime). It is an offence for
Other Parties to obtain this personal data without authorisation.
- Individuals have a right of access to the information held about
them, subject to certain exceptions (for example, information held for
the prevention or detection of crime).
- Personal information may be kept for no longer than is necessary
and must be kept up to date.
- Personal information may not be transmitted outside the European Economic Area
unless the individual whom it is about has consented or adequate
protection is in place, for example by the use of a prescribed form of
contract to govern the transmission of the data.
- Subject to some exceptions for organisations that only do very
simple processing, and for domestic use, all entities that process
personal information must register with the Information Commissioner's
Office.
- Entities holding personal information are required to have
adequate
security measures in place. Those include technical measures (such as
firewalls) and organisational measures (such as staff training).
- Subjects have the right to have factually incorrect
information corrected (note: this does not extend to matters of opinion)
[edit] Personal data
The Data Protection Act covers any data which can be used to
identify a living person. This includes names, birthday and anniversary
dates, addresses, telephone numbers, fax numbers, email addresses and
so on. It applies only to that data which is held, or intended to be
held, on computers ('equipment operating automatically in response to
instructions given for that purpose'), or held in a 'relevant filing
system'.
It should be noted that an ordinary paper diary can be classified as
a 'relevant filing system' if it can be demonstrated that the diary is
used to support commercial activities (for example, a salesperson's
diary).
[edit] Subject rights
The Data Protection Act creates rights for those who have their data
stored, and responsibilities for those who store or collect personal
data.
The person who has their data processed has the right to[2]
- View the data an organisation holds on them, for a small fee,
known as 'subject access'[3]
- Request that incorrect information be corrected. If the company
ignores the request, a court can order the data to be corrected or
destroyed, and in some cases compensation
can be awarded.[4]
- Require that data is not used in a way which makes damage or
distress.[5]
- Require that their data is not used for direct marketing.[6]
[edit] Data protection principles
- Personal data shall be processed fairly and lawfully and, in
particular, shall not be processed unless-
- at least one of the conditions in Schedule 2 is met, and
- in the case of sensitive personal data, at least one of the
conditions in Schedule 3 is also met.
- Personal data shall be obtained only for one or more specified
and
lawful purposes, and shall not be further processed in any manner
incompatible with that purpose or those purposes.
- Personal data shall be adequate, relevant and not excessive in
relation to the purpose or purposes for which they are processed.
- Personal data shall be accurate and, where necessary, kept up to
date.
- Personal data processed for any purpose or purposes shall not be
kept for longer than is necessary for that purpose or those purposes.
- Personal data shall be processed in accordance with the rights of
data subjects under this Act.
- Appropriate technical and organisational measures shall be taken
against unauthorised or unlawful processing of personal data and
against accidental loss or destruction of, or damage to, personal data.
- Personal data shall not be transferred to a country or territory
outside the European Economic Area
unless that country or territory ensures an adequate level of
protection for the rights and freedoms of data subjects in relation to
the processing of personal data.
[edit]
Conditions relevant to the first principle
Personal data should only be processed fairly and lawfully. In order
for data to be classed as 'fairly processed', at least one of these six
conditions must be applicable to that data (Schedule 2).
- The data subject (the person whose data is stored) has consented
("given their permission") to the processing;
- Processing is necessary for 'the performance of a contract (any
processing not directly required to complete a contract would not be
"fair");
- Processing is required under a legal obligation (other than one
stated in the contract);
- Processing is necessary to protect the vital interests of the
data subject's rights;
- Processing is necessary to carry out any public functions;
- Processing is necessary in order to pursue the legitimate
interests
of the "data controller" or "third parties" (unless it could
unjustifiably prejudice the interests of the data subject). [7]
Sensitive personal data must be processed according to a stricter
set of conditions, in particular any consent must be explicit.
[edit] Exceptions
The Act is structured such that all processing of personal data is
covered by the act, while providing a number of exceptions in Part IV.[1] Notable exceptions
are:
- Section 28 - National security. Any processing for the purpose of
safeguarding national security are exempt from all the data protection
principles, as well as Part II (subject access rights), Part III
(notification), Part V (enforcement), and Section 55 (Unlawful
obtaining of personal data).
- Section 29 - Crime and taxation. Data processed for the
prevention
or detection of crime, the apprehension or prosecution of offenders, or
the assessment or collection of taxes are exempt from the first data
protection principle.
- Section 36 - Domestic purposes. Processing by an individual only
for the purposes of that individual's personal, family or household
affairs is exempt from all the data protection principles, as well as
Part II (subject access rights) and Part III (notification).
[edit] Offences
The Act details a number of civil and criminal offences for which
data controllers may be liable if a data controller has failed to gain
appropriate consent from a data subject. However 'consent' is not
specifically defined in the Act; consent is therefore a common law
matter.
- Section 55 - Unlawful obtaining of personal data. This Section
makes it an offence for people (Other Parties), such as hackers and
impersonators, outside the organisation to obtain unauthorised access
to the personal data.[8]
- Section 56 - This section makes it a criminal offence to require
an individual to make a Subject Access Request relating to cautions or convictions
for the purposes of recruitment, continued employment, or the provision
of services.[9] As of 2007 this
section has not yet been enabled.[10] According to the
government, this section will not be enabled until the Criminal Records Bureau is
providing a 'basic disclosure' service.[11] The provision of a
basic disclosure service is dependent on s.112 of the Police Act
1997 being enacted, which provides for "Criminal Conviction
Certificate".[10]
[edit] Complexity
The UK Data Protection Act is a large Act that has a reputation for
complexity.[12]
While the basic principles are honoured for protecting privacy,
interpreting the act is not always simple. Many companies,
organisations and individuals seem very unsure of the aims, content and
principles of the DPA. Some hide behind the Act and refuse to provide
even very basic, publicly available material quoting the Act as a
restriction.[13]
The act also impacts on the way in which organisations conduct business
in terms of who can be contacted for marketing purposes, not only by
telephone and direct mail, but also electronically and has led to the
development of permission based marketing strategies.
[edit] Apparent flaws in the Act
Several apparent flaws may be found in the text of The Act. One
potential effect of such flaws is that data processing systems can
readily be devised which circumvent the spirit but not the letter of
The Act.
[edit] Definition of personal data
The definition of personal data is data which relates to a living
individual who can be identified:—
- from that data, or
- from that data and other information which is in the possession
of,
or is likely to come into the possession of, the data controller,
This is a subjective definition since whether particular data is
personal data depends on which data controller is referred to in the
definition. However, the Act is generally drafted as if the definition
were explicit.
Sensitive personal data concerns the subject's race, ethnicity,
politics, religion, trade union status, health, sex life or criminal
record.[14]
[edit] Subject access
Personal data which is normally held for under 40 days may be
legitimately denied in subject access requests under The Act. This is a
consequence of the time limit data controllers must meet in making
their response. If the data has been deleted by the normal procedures
of the business by the time the data controller responds to a request,
that data cannot be supplied. For data such as Closed-circuit television images
which are routinely overwritten, it may be impossible for a subject to
exercise their data access rights.
[edit] Regulation
Compliance with the Act is enforced by an independent authority, the
Information Commissioner's
Office, which maintains guidance relating to the Act.[15]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Data Protection Act 1998,
Part IV (Exemptions), Section 36, Office of Public Sector
Information, accessed 6 September 2007
- ^ Your rights,, ICO, accessed 6 September 2007
- ^ As of 2006, the maximum fee is £10 per item, FAQs, ICO
- ^ Correcting information, ICO
- ^ Data Protection Act 1998, Part III (Notification by Data Controllers), Section 10,
Office of Public Sector
Information, accessed 6 September 2007
- ^ Data Protection Act 1998, Part III (Notification by Data Controllers), Section 11,
Office of Public Sector
Information, accessed 6 September 2007
- ^ [1] Data Protection Act 1998 Schedule 2
- ^ Data Protection Act 1998, Part VI (Miscellaneous and General), Section 55, Office of Public Sector
Information, accessed 14 September 2007
- ^ Data Protection Act 1998, Part VI (Miscellaneous and General), Section 56, Office of Public Sector
Information, accessed 14 September 2007
- ^ a b British Employment Law website (emplaw.co.uk),
Criminal law aspects / vetting of job applicants / position under
Police Act 1997
- ^ Hansard, 28 Jun 2005 : Column 1451W
- ^ Bainbridge, D: "Introduction to Computer Law -
Fifth Edition", page 430. Pearson Education Limited, 2005
- ^ Data Protection myths and realities, Information Commissioner's
Office, accessed 30 August 2008
- ^ http://www.opsi.gov.uk/ACTS/acts1998/ukpga_19980029_en_2
- ^ Guidance - The Data Protection Act, Page of Assorted Guidance, Information Commissioner's
Office, accessed 20 October 2007
[edit] External links