Data (Use and Access) Bill [HL] Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateBaroness Harding of Winscombe
Main Page: Baroness Harding of Winscombe (Conservative - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Harding of Winscombe's debates with the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology
(1 day, 13 hours ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, I rise to move Amendment 15 and to speak to Amendments 16, 20, 22, 27, 39, 45 and, briefly, government Amendment 40. Together, these amendments offer protections that children were afforded in the Data Protection Act 2018, which passed through this House, and they seek to fix some of the underperformance of the ICO in relation to children’s data.
Before we debate these amendments, it is perhaps worth the Government reflecting on the fact that survey after survey shows that the vast majority—indeed, almost all—of the UK population support stronger digital regulation in respect of children. In refusing to accept these amendments, or, indeed, in replacing them with their own amendments to the same effect, the Government are throwing away one of the successes of the UK Parliament with their newfound enthusiasm for tech with fewer safeguards.
I repeat my belief that lowering data protections for adults is a regressive step for all of us, but for children it is a tragedy that puts them at greater risk of harm—a harm that we in this House have a proud record of seeking to mitigate. The amendments in my name and variously in the names of the noble Lords, Lord Stevenson and Lord Clement-Jones, my noble friend Lord Russell and the noble Baroness, Lady Harding, are essential to preserving the UK’s commitment to child protection and privacy. As the House is well aware, there is cross-party support for child protection. While I will listen very carefully to the Minister, I too am prepared to test the opinion of the House if he has nothing to offer, and I will ask Labour colleagues to consider their responsibility to the nation’s children before they walk through the Lobby.
I will take the amendments out of numerical order, for the benefit of those who have not been following our proceedings. Amendment 22 creates a direct, unambiguous obligation on data processors and controllers to consider the central principles of the age-appropriate design code when processing children’s data. It acknowledges that children of different ages have different capacities and therefore may require different responses. Subsection (2) of the new clause it would insert addresses the concern expressed during the passage of the Bill and its predecessor that children should be shielded from the reduction in privacy protections that adults would experience under the Act when passed.
In the last few weeks, Meta has removed its moderators, and the once-lauded Twitter has become flooded with disinformation and abuse as a result of Elon Musk’s determined deregulation and support of untruth. We have seen the dial move on elections in Romania’s presidential election via TikTok, a rise in scams and the horror of sexually explicit deepfakes, which we will discuss in a later group.
Public trust in both tech and politics is catastrophically low. While we may disagree on the extent to which adults deserve privacy and protection, there are few in this House or the other place who do not believe it is a duty of government to protect children. Amendment 22 simply makes it a requirement that those who control and process children’s data are directly accountable for considering and prioritising their needs. Amendment 39 does the same job in relation to the ICO, highlighting the need to consider that high bar of privacy to which children are entitled, which should be a focus of the commissioner when exercising its regulatory functions, with a particular emphasis on their age and development stage.
Despite Dame Elizabeth Denham’s early success in drafting the age-appropriate design code, the ICO’s track record on enforcement is poor and the leadership has not championed children by robustly enforcing the ADC, or when faced with proposals that watered down child protections in this Bill and its predecessor. We will get to the question of the ICO next week, but I have been surprised by the amount of incoming mail dissatisfied with the regulator and calling on Parliament to demand more robust action. This amendment does exactly that in relation to children.
Government Amendment 40 would require the ICO, when exercising its functions, to consider the fact that children merit specific protections. I am grateful for and welcome this addition as far as it goes; but in light of the ICO’s disappointing track record, clearer and more robust guidance on its obligations is needed.
Moreover, the Government’s proposal is also insufficient because it creates a duty on the ICO only. It does nothing for the controllers and processors, as I have already set out in Amendment 22. It is essential that those who control and process children’s data are directly accountable for prioritising their needs. The consequences when they do not are visible in the anxiety, body dysmorphia and other developmental issues that children experience as a result of their time online.
The Government have usefully introduced an annual report of ICO activities and action. Amendment 45 simply requires them to report the action it has taken specifically in relation to children, as a separate item. Creating better reporting is one of the advances the Government have made; making it possible to see what the ICO has done in regard to children is little more than housekeeping.
This group also includes clause-specific amendments, which are more targeted than Amendment 22. Amendment 15 excludes children from the impact of the proposal to widen the definition of scientific research in Clause 68. Given that we have just discussed this, I may reconsider that amendment. However, Amendment 16 excludes children from the “recognised legitimate interest” provisions in Clause 70. This means that data controllers would still be required to consider and protect children, as currently required under the legitimate interest basis for processing their data.
Amendment 20 excludes children from the new provisions in Clause 71 on purpose limitation. Purpose limitation is at the heart of GDPR. If you ask for a particular purpose and consent to it, extending that purpose is problematic. Amendment 21 ensures that, for children at least, the status quo of data protection law stays the same: that is to say, their personal data can be used only for the purpose for which it was originally collected. If the controller wants to use it in a different way, it must go back to the child—or, if they are under 13, their parent—to ask for further permission.
Finally, Amendment 27 ensures that significant decisions that impact children cannot be made during automated processes unless they are in a child’s best interest. This is a reasonable check and balance on the proposals in Clause 80.
In full, these amendments uphold our collective responsibility to support, protect and make allowances for children as they journey from infancy to adulthood. I met with the Minister and the Bill team, and I thank them for their time. They rightly made the point that children should be participants in the digital world, and I should not seek to exempt them. I suggest to the House that it is the other way round: I will not seek to exempt children if the Government do not seek to put them at risk.
Our responsibility to children is woven into the fabric of our laws, our culture and our behaviour. It has taken two decades to begin to weave childhood into the digital environment, and I am asking the House to make sure we do not take a single retrograde step. The Government have a decision to make. They can choose to please the CEOs of Silicon Valley in the hope that capitulation on regulatory standards will get us a data centre or two; or they can prioritise the best interests of UK children and agree to these amendments, which put children’s needs first. I beg to move.
My Lords, I rise to support all the amendments in this group. I have added my name to Amendments 15, 22, 27 and 45. The only reason my name is not on the other amendments is that others got there before me. As is always the case in our debates on this topic, I do not need to repeat the arguments of the noble Baroness, Lady Kidron. I would just like to make a very high-level point.