Provides a common-sense set of rules which stop the misuse of your personal information without stopping it being used for legitimate or beneficial reasons.
The details of the Data Protection Act are quite complex, but there are eight common-sense rules known as the Data Protection Principles.
These require personal information to be:
- fairly and lawfully processed;
- processed for limited purposes;
- adequate, relevant and not excessive;
- accurate;
- not kept longer than necessary;
- processed in accordance with your rights;
- kept secure;
- not transferred abroad without adequate protection.
Organisations using personal information ('data controllers') must comply with these Principles.
The Act provides stronger protection for sensitive information about your ethnic origins, political opinions, religious beliefs, trade union membership, health, sexual life and any criminal history.
Getting access to your information
The Act, with some exceptions, gives you the right to find out what information is held about you by organisations. This is known as the 'right of subject access'. On written request, you are entitled to be supplied with a copy of all the information an organisations holds about you.
The organisation may charge a fee for providing the information, up to a maximum of £10 in most instances and up to £50 in the case of manual (i.e. non-electronic) medical records. To see what information is held on you by credit reference agencies costs £2.
Stopping direct marketing
You also have the right to stop organisations using your personal information for direct marketing purposes. You can do this by registering your details with one of the preference services..
The Act is enforced by an independent authority called the Information Commissioner. He has powers to take action against organisations that misuse information about you.
http://www.ico.gov.uk/eventual.aspx
On the right you can download a copy of the Personal Information Toolkit from the Information Commissioners Office
Use the links on the right for further information