informationrightsandwrongs
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About me
  • Comments policy
  • Privacy Notice
← Farrow & Ball lose appeal for non-payment of data protection fee
ICO breaching the law it’s meant to oversee →
May 3, 2019 · 5:28 pm

ICO – HMRC must delete 5 million voice records

I have a piece on the Mishcon de Reya website, on news that the ICO has required HMRC to delete 5 million unlawfully gathered Voice ID records.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • More
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Leave a comment

Filed under consent, Data Protection, HMRC, Information Commissioner

Tagged as data protection, HMRC, ICO

← Farrow & Ball lose appeal for non-payment of data protection fee
ICO breaching the law it’s meant to oversee →

Comments are closed.

  • Blogroll

    • 2040 Info Law Blog
    • Act Now Training
    • Alistair Sloan
    • bailii
    • BBC's FOI Page
    • Campaign for Freedom of Information
    • Hawktalk – Amberhawk blog
    • Human Rights Blog
    • Information Commissioner's Office
    • Judith Townend's blog
    • Martin Hoskin's blog
    • Mishcon Data Matters
    • NADPO
    • Panopticon Blog
  • Recent Posts

    • Gov says “no” to UK GDPR opt-out actions but…
    • UK GDPR Resource
    • Search and (don’t) destroy
    • You don’t “register” with the ICO
    • Oil well not personal data shock
  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 616 other followers

  • RSS Links

    • RSS - Posts
    • RSS - Comments
  • Creative Commons Licence
    InformationRightsandWrongs by Jon Baines is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  • Privacy Notice

    Privacy Notice
informationrightsandwrongs · News and comments from a UK Information Rights perspective
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • This is an off-the-peg wordpress blog. It places cookies on your device. There's an interesting debate to be had as to whether they're strictly necessary for the provision of an information society service requested by the subscriber or user, given that I can't turn them off. Drop me a line if you want that debate - I'll probably agree with you. Here's the rub
  • %d bloggers like this: