All 2 Debates between Baroness Hamwee and Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve

Mon 20th Nov 2017
Data Protection Bill [HL]
Lords Chamber

Committee: 5th sitting (Hansard): House of Lords

Data Protection Bill [HL]

Debate between Baroness Hamwee and Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve
Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve Portrait Baroness O’Neill of Bengarve
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My Lords, I support the spirit of this amendment. I think it is the right thing and that we ultimately might aspire to a code. In the meantime, I suspect that there is a lot of work to be done because the field is changing extremely fast. The stewardship body which the noble Lord referred to, a deliberative body, may be the right prelude to identifying the shape that a code should now take, so perhaps this has to be taken in a number of steps and not in one bound.

Baroness Hamwee Portrait Baroness Hamwee (LD)
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My Lords, I too support the amendment. Picking up this last point, I am looking to see whether the draft clause contains provisions for keeping the code under review. A citizens’ charter is a very good way of describing the objective of such a code. I speak as a citizen who has very frequently, I am sure, given uninformed consent to the use of my data, and the whole issue of informed consent would be at the centre of such a code.

Protection of Freedoms Bill

Debate between Baroness Hamwee and Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve
Tuesday 29th November 2011

(12 years, 12 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve Portrait Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve
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My Lords, I should like to ask the Minister whether the Government considered an alternative way of reducing recourse to the DNA database that would, on the one hand, have restricted the police from searching the database except where there was a proposal to press charges for serious violence or a serious sexual offence, and on the other hand where the person arrested requests that the database should be searched for the purposes of exoneration.

Baroness Hamwee Portrait Baroness Hamwee
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My Lords, I am so glad that I prompted my noble friend Lord Phillips to speak before me because he put into words much better than I could have done things that I was trying to articulate in my own mind. He mentioned the possibility of a 100 per cent compulsory database, and I too had been working towards that as a question. I cannot, however, follow the suggestion of a voluntary database. I am not a psychologist and I cannot put myself into the mindset of an offender, but it is difficult to believe that a voluntary database would be any sort of deterrent at all.