BloodOmen
I am a FH squatter
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2004
- Messages
- 18,676
what he said tbh. medical records are to be handled with the utmost care, and certainly not bandied about in such a manner.Disgrace.
Sack those responsible, apologise, move on.
Suing them is not the correct way about it, the NHS is strapped for cash as it is.
I don't get the 'profit' argument, profit for who exactly? - What if they said, look, we had to do it, but with the money that we made saved x amount of lives, would your stance change?
Disagree all you want Scousey boy, we can't keep sue the NHS, otherwise there won't be a NHS
suey suey = no nhsy nhsy - People who sue should be exempt from NHS care.No suey-suey, no-learny-lessony.
suey suey = no nhsy nhsy - People who sue should be exempt from NHS care.
Apart from the obvious?
The extracted information will contain a person's NHS number, date of birth, postcode, ethnicity and gender. - Perhaps that? and the fact its not only been brought to light by the dim witted media but its also on a server that has been hacked before (if i'm not mistaken google has already been hacked before, so the claims that its "Secure" are bollocks)And what do you consider the 'obvious' to be?
Simply put: there's no definitive boundary that keeps Google from using what it likes from what you upload to its service."
Other than the fact that any servers operated by Google within the EU would be subject to relevant data protection legislation in whichever EU country Google is operating from. And for any servers operated outside the EU there would need to be contracts in place to govern the transfer and use of the data to provide similar safeguards to those in EU data protection legislation, or Google would have to be signed up to something like the US Safe Harbor programme which would again provide safeguards similar to those in EU data protection legislation.
And to be honest, given the Guardian have previously reported that the new Care.Data system would allow the police to obtain patient data without a warrant as if it was something new that hadn't been possible before, I'm going to hold off on getting all worked up for the time being.
Yes, which arguably means absolutely nothing for Google, if they have agreed to this when uploading said data (which they will have had to) i'd say Google could argue they have every right to redistribute said data now that its essentially been signed off on by which ever cock badger uploaded it.
Other than the fact that any servers operated by Google within the EU would be subject to relevant data protection legislation in whichever EU country Google is operating from.
Nope. The data protection requirement was on the NHS. Google is not required to abide by them.
This is an epic win for them commercially.
And plus, Krazeh, if you couldn't see the obvious before - why do you think whatever your thinking now isn't missing the point wholly and completely again (which you are). You advertised yourself as unable to grasp the basics earlier in the discussion after all...
You are.I'm not missing the point at all.
True. And they've likely breached the DPA.it's likely that PA Consulting would be the data controller in this case
PA consulting uploading data to google means that they've granted google the right to resell and use the data. The fact that PA consulting may not have the right to do that is immaterial to google - google are beholden to their own rules and it's not down to google to enforce the DPA beyond their own terms and conditions.And in what way would Google selling confidential information stored on their systems be an epic win for them?
True. And they've likely breached the DPA.
PA consulting uploading data to google means that they've granted google the right to resell and use the data. The fact that PA consulting may not have the right to do that is immaterial to google - google are beholden to their own rules and it's not down to google to enforce the DPA beyond their own terms and conditions.
You upload to google, you grant them what it says in google's t's & c's. You upload to google, it ain't "confidential" no more.
When you upload or otherwise submit content to our Services, you give Google (and those we work with) a worldwide licence to use, host, store, reproduce, modify, create derivative works ... communicate, publish, publicly perform, publicly display and distribute such content.
Clear?
Edit: BTW @Krazeh - anonymised (or pseudoanonymised) data is NOT covered by the DPA.
their license to do things with the data are for the limited purpose of operating, promoting and improving our Services, and to develop new ones. So as I said before they don't have carte blanche to sell the data.
Not imaginitive. Straight-up straightforward reading.Can I assume from your imaginative reading of the T&Cs
It's not "fucking over" anyone. You use google's services you grant them those rights. Don't like it, don't use them. Simple.why it'd be a win for Google to fuck over their own business by using confidential data uploaded to their cloud services for their own purposes
Have/haven't breached the DPA is immaterial. Who gives a shit (other than you)? This is personal medical data being transported outside the NHS, never mind outside the UK to a company with form for indelicate data handling, a stated desire to abolish privacy and a legal grey area.PA Consulting have breached the DPA?
A number of reasons, but we'll leave the betrayal of trust in the doctor-patient relationship (you know, the really obvious one) out of it and simply state that anonymised data clearly isn't. Especially when it comes to medical records - which by their nature are as about as personal as they get - and, by admission, it's the "entire start-to-finish HES dataset across all three areas of collection". You cannot properly anonymise this data - and it's not been anyway.Or why it's such an issue if the data has been anonymised/pseudonymised?