The Information Commissioners Office (ICO) has been granted new powers. The
data watchdog has had one of its requests answered, gaining the ability to
impose 'substantial' fines on business that lose data.
The new powers are enabled by the
Criminal
Justice and Immigration Act which this week received Royal Assent,
meaning that it has passed into law. The legislation gives the ICO the power to,
" impose substantial fines on organisations that deliberately or recklessly
commit serious breaches of the Data Protection Act.
David Smith, Deputy Information Commissioner said, “This change in the law
sends a very clear signal that data protection must be a priority and that it is
completely unacceptable to be cavalier with people’s personal information. The
prospect of substantial fines for deliberate or reckless breaches of the Data
Protection Principles will act as a strong deterrent and help ensure that
organisations take their data protection obligations more seriously.
“This new power will enable some of the worst breaches of the Data Protection
Act to be punished. By demonstrating that the law is being taken seriously
tougher sanctions will help to reassure individuals that data protection matters
and give them confidence that organisations have no choice but to handle
personal information properly.
The ICO has repeatedly called for stronger powers since the Data Protection
Act came into force.
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