Data Protection and Digital Information (No. 2) Bill (Second sitting) Debate

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Stephanie Peacock Portrait Stephanie Peacock
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Q My final question is to all the witnesses. What are your views on the reforms to the ICO and their potential impact on its independence from Government?

Ms Irvine: We have concerns about the proposed changes and their potential impact on the independence of the Information Commissioner. I was able to listen to John Edwards speaking this morning, and I noted that he did not share those concerns, which I find surprising. The ICO is tasked with producing statutory codes of conduct, which are incredibly useful for my clients and for anyone working in this sector. The fact that the Secretary of State can, in effect, overrule these is concerning, and it must be seen as a limit on the Information Commissioner’s independence.

That leads to a concern that we have in relation to the adequacy decision that is in place between the EU and the United Kingdom. Article 52 of the GDPR states very clearly that a supervisory authority must have clear independence. The provisions relating to the independence of the Commission—the potential interference of the Secretary of State in law is enough to undermine independence—are therefore of concern to us.

Alexandra Sinclair: We would just say that it is not typical for an independent regulator to have its strategic objectives set by a Minister, and for a Minister to set those priorities without necessarily consulting. We consider that the ICO, as subject matter experts, are probably best placed to do that.

Jacob Smith: From our perspective, the only thing to add is that one way to improve the clauses on national security certificates and designation notices would be to give the ICO an increased role in oversight and monitoring, for instance. Obviously, if there are concerns about its independence, we would want to consider other mechanisms.

Carol Monaghan Portrait Carol Monaghan (Glasgow North West) (SNP)
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Q Laura Irvine, in your briefing about the Bill you raised concerns about some of the language. We had some discussion this morning about the language and particular terms, such as what “vexatious” means, for example. Could you elaborate on your concerns?

Ms Irvine: Certainly. There are terms that have been used in data protection law since the 1984 Act. They were used again in the 1998 Act, echoed under the GDPR and included in all the guidance that has come from the Information Commissioner’s Office over the past number of years. In addition to that, there is case law that has interpreted many of those terms. Some of the proposed changes in the Bill introduce unexpected and unusual terms that will require interpretation. Even then, once we have guidance from the Information Commissioner, that guidance is sometimes not as helpful as interpretation by tribunals and courts, which is pretty sparse in this sector. The number of cases coming through the courts is limited—albeit that there is a lot more activity in the sector than there used to be. It simply presents a lot more questions and uncertainty in certain ways.

For my business clients, that is a great difficulty, and I certainly spend a lot of time advising clients on how I believe a matter—a phrase—will be interpreted, because I have knowledge of how data protection law works in general. That is based on my experience of the power of businesses and organisations, particularly in the third sector. Smaller bodies will often be challenged by a lack of knowledge and expertise, and that is a difficulty of introducing in legislation brand-new terms that are not familiar to practitioners, far less the organisations asked to implement the changes.

Carol Monaghan Portrait Carol Monaghan
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Q You also raised concerns about automated decision making. Again, we have heard quite a lot about that today. You talked about a case on automated decision making, with regard to benefit awards being made by local authorities. Can you tell us a bit about that and where the danger might lie here?

Ms Irvine: I expect that you have heard a lot of warnings about safety. I echo what Alexandra said earlier about the removal of the right not to have automated decisions taken by organisations. That is something that we were concerned to see in a society where this is happening more and more. The particular example that we gave came from a study that had been carried out by the Equality and Human Rights Commission. That was looking particularly at decision making in local authorities; at how AI or algorithms were being used to take decisions without enough transparency; and at whether this gave the individuals the right to challenge those decisions, which stems from the transparency that is built in. The challenge for any organisation using any automated decision making—particularly in the public sector, I would submit, where the impact can be extremely significant, particularly if we are talking about benefits—is making sure these organisations understand what the technology is doing, explaining that to individuals and giving them the right to object.

The changes in the Bill relax the restrictions on automated decision making and allow that to happen almost as a default, with safeguards as an add-on, whereas article 22 as currently drafted provides a right not to have automated decisions taken about an individual unless certain circumstances apply. To echo what Alexandra said, when more and more decisions are being made automatically without a human intervening, and certainly without a human intervening at the appropriate stage to prevent damage or harm to individuals, it would absolutely seem like the wrong time to make these changes and relaxations to the regime.

Carol Monaghan Portrait Carol Monaghan
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Thank you.

None Portrait The Chair
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You have all been superstars in our 10th panel. Thank you very much indeed for the evidence you have given this afternoon. We will now move on to the next panel.

Examination of Witness

Alex Lawrence-Archer gave evidence.