Hawktalk

DUAB degrades the Purpose Limitation Principle below the DP standards set 45 years ago

I have just realised that the Data (Access and Use) Bill (DAUB), which returns for its Commons Report stage today,  degrades two Data Protection Principles in Article 5 of the UK_GDPR; namely the Principles dealing with lawfulness and incompatibility [A.5(1)(a) and A.5(1)(b)]. Indeed, the revised wording of the Purpose Limitation Principle [A.5(1)(b)] does not meet the requirements set 45 years ago in the Council of Europe Convention No 108, in 1981.  This blog goes into this new wording in detail.

Read article

Data Bill’s problems exposed as Government rush DUAB through Parliament – Part 2

This is the second instalment of my list of nineteen areas where the Data Use and Access Bill (DUAB) provisions act to the detriment of data subjects. In Part 1 (blog of 25 Feb 2025), I listed a summary of the issues that would cause problems with renewing the Adequacy Agreement with the European Commission. This blog gives more details of the problems associated with the regulator (the ICO and the replacement Information Commission). The summary points concerning DUAB are:

Read article

Data Bill’s problems exposed as Government rush DUAB through Parliament – Part 1

The following is a summary list of nineteen Data Use and Access Bill (DUAB) provisions which act to the detriment of data subjects. Because of its length, I have split these issues in two blogs.  Part 2 of this set will be published on Thursday. All these issues have been raised in my evidence to the Public Bill Committee which is considering DUAB;  you can access this evidence (see references).  The Committee stages start on Tuesday  March 4, and are

Read article

Data Bill legislates for expansive degradation of data subject protection

The Prime Minister and the Chancellor of the Exchequer have gone "all in" with Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the expectation that it generates economic growth.  It has told the main UK Regulators, including the ICO, to ease-off on general enforcement if such enforcement creates a serious risk to that growth. To ensure Regulators fall obediently in line, the chair of UK's competition Regulator was removed by the government in late January, to be replaced by someone more “amenable” to the

Read article

DUAB makes function creep in the public sector inevitable and lawful

This blog is the promised second instalment that deals with the powers in the Data (Use and Access) Bill (DUAB  “Bill”).  These powers give Ministers the ability to sweep aside key elements of the UK_GDPR that protects data subjects from function creep in the public sector. In evidence in support the above statement, this blog explains details of: the two powers that give Ministers the ability to specify any voluntary data sharing with any public body as lawful and not incompatible

Read article

Data Bill makes any data sharing with any public sector body lawful

This blog considers how the Data (Use and Access) Bill (the “Bill”) impacts on the lawful bases used in the context of voluntary data sharing with public bodies. In summary, the Bill creates an infrastructure of Ministerial powers that ensures voluntary data sharing to the public sector has a lawful basis;  that such data sharing is not incompatible with the purpose of obtaining, and that such data sharing is, in practice, exempt from the right to object. These powers have

Read article
Search Hawktalk blogs by month :
Select Date
View blogs by category:
Hawktalk Taxonomy
Upcoming courses:
2 February – 6 February 2026
13 April – 17 April 2026
24 March – 26 March 2026
15 June – 17 June 2026

Workshop: Thursday 20 Nov

Cartoon: