The latest UK Data Protection Index results reveals that many privacy experts believe the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS)鈥檚 consultation, Data: A New Direction is heading the wrong direction.
2022 has seen some of the most significant developments in UK data protection, including the introduction of legislation to overhaul UK data protection law and the ICO鈥檚 publication of its new strategic plan (ICO25). One of the biggest unknowns is the outcome of the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS)鈥檚 consultation, Data: A New Direction. Although the new UK Data Protection and Digital Information Bill was introduced to Parliament, its second reading has been postponed following election of the new Prime Minister; further adding to the uncertainty.听听听
However, 81 per cent of UK data experts indicated that the proposal to remove the current requirement on certain organisations to appoint a DPO and instead only designate a 鈥渟uitable senior individual鈥 to oversee the organisation鈥檚 privacy management programme will not be in the best interests of the data subjects (which includes customers, employees and suppliers).听
In addition, 69% of the UK data expert indicated that they think it won鈥檛 save money, being much of the justification presented by DCMS), and 82% indicate that they do not expect the new regime will simplify privacy management.
More from Tech
- Are People More Willing To Tolerate Ads If It Means Lower Subscription Costs?
- Spotify Just Made It Possible To Find A Podcast By Describing A Feeling
- France Ghosted Microsoft, Zoom And Teams All At Once 鈥 Should You Be Worried About Your Tech Stack?
- News Outlets Are Turning Journalists Into Influencers To Stay Alive 鈥 Is That A Smart Move Or A Slow Disaster?
- Europe Just Launched Its Own Answer To Meta And X 鈥 But Can Anyone Actually Compete With A Billion Users?
- Could Shenzhen Be The World鈥檚 Fastest Growing Tech Hub Right Now?
- Africa Tech Summit London Returns With Focus On Fintech, AI And Cross-Border Growth
- Robots That Understand The World Are Coming 鈥 Google DeepMind’s Latest Model Is A Big Step Closer
Rob Masson, CEO, The DPO Centre 鈥淭he DCMS consultation on data protection is continuing to cause confusion and, until more guidance is published on what these changes will mean for businesses, it is likely to remain that way.鈥 I would hope the new prime minister will listen to the industry that has been working hard to make the UK a world leader in data protection.听听
鈥淢y concern is that organisations will try to change before the new framework is in place. 听Organisations need to understand that any regulatory change is unlikely to be realised for many months, or even years from now. Therefore, businesses should be mindful of the fact that, for the foreseeable future, the UK GDPR as it stands still applies.鈥 听
The Index also highlights that a third of companies in the UK are in the process or have already removed Google Analytics from their website following complaints from the campaign group noyb (None of Your Business). 听The decision comes from the Austrian and French data protection regulators, who both deemed the use of Google Analytics a violation of the GDPR鈥檚 data transfer rules by sending personal data to the U.S. 听
The DP Index asks data protection and privacy experts to identify the issues they see as their organisations鈥 biggest GDPR compliance challenge over the next 12 months. 听Whilst Data Retention is the biggest challenge (28%) it is AI, Machine learning and data ethics which is becoming the fastest growing challenge. 听In the past year, concern has grown three fold, from 4% to 12%.听
Rob Masson, CEO, The DPO Centre continued, 鈥淚t is interesting to note that AI regulation is the fastest growing challenge facing many organisations. 听Over 60 per cent of UK organisations already use or are planning to use AI in the near future according to a DCMS survey1.听
鈥淭his means an increased use of鈥 due to the training of some AI systems relying on personal data to be able to work effectively. 听Like any technology that uses personal data, companies using AI systems will have to follow the rules laid down in data protection legislation.鈥澨
The full report of the latest UK Data Protection Index survey is available at:鈥
听
鈥