英国希望在罪犯下手之前,先掌握数据经纪商的内幕信息。
UK wants dirt on data brokers before criminals get there first

原始链接: https://www.theregister.com/2025/03/18/uk_data_broker_inquiry/

英国政府正因国家安全担忧而审查数据经纪行业,并通过科学、创新和技术部(DSIT)发起了证据征集。此次调查旨在了解数据经纪商的运营、安全措施和客户,其起因是对数据经纪商囤积数据以及可能遭受敌对国家和犯罪分子网络攻击的日益增长的担忧。此举恰逢《数据(使用和访问)法案》(DUAB)的推进,《数据(使用和访问)法案》旨在简化数据共享,同时遵守GDPR。 DUAB引入了“数据中介”来促进道德和安全的数据共享,并将它们与数据经纪商区分开来,强调个人的同意并以数据主体利益为出发点。数据中介调查的重点是定义其运营模式,而数据经纪商调查则更关注潜在的安全风险和现有保障措施的有效性。政府敦促利益相关者在5月12日之前贡献他们的见解,并保证对敏感信息的处理安全。

Hacker News 最新 | 过去 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 招聘 | 提交 登录 英国希望在罪犯之前掌握数据经纪商的资料 (theregister.com) rntn 30分钟前 18分 | 隐藏 | 过去 | 收藏 | 1条评论 ricardo81 9分钟前 [–] 这看起来是合理的,想要更深入的了解。我知道很多技术人员已经放弃隐私,因为他们知道秘密已经泄露了。了解有多少公司知道我的X/Y/Z细节将会很有启发性。我想这会相当可怕。在欧洲,我们受制于大型科技公司对数据的自由使用,这据说是数据使用的合法方面。 回复 加入我们,参加6月16日至17日在旧金山举行的AI创业学校! 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请YC | 联系方式 搜索:

原文

The UK government is inviting experts to provide insights about the data brokerage industry and the potential risks it poses to national security as it moves to push new data-sharing legislation over the line.

Organizations that pay for the services of data brokers and supply data to them, as well as data brokers themselves, are specifically invited to engage with the Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology's (DSIT) call, although views from all stakeholders are welcome. The views of academics and think tanks whose work concerns the industry are also in demand.

"The UK government is seeking views to understand more about organizations that take part in data broking and the wider industry," DSIT said. "In particular, the government would like to understand the operations, security practices, and customers of data brokers, to support policy development."

Data brokers or information product companies – whatever your preferred term for these types of orgs – have faced growing criticism in today's data protection-conscious world, especially as their hoarding of data into poorly guarded cloudy jackpots has faciliated of leak after leak.

These companies essentially collect vast amounts of personal data and sell these datasets to other organizations that can use them to build profiles on their target market.

This naturally makes them a goldmine for both marketers and cybercriminals. The US has in recent years taken regulatory action against several, some of which store hundreds of millions of records.

Where the FTC doesn't act, The Register steps in to shine a spotlight on those with less-than-ideal security. Successful attacks on data brokers are not as rare as you might think or hope.

The UK government appears to recognize this. DSIT's call for evidence acknowledges that these companies hold a trove of sensitive data that could be of huge interest to hostile states and cybercriminals both domestically and abroad.

It's not a coincidence that the call comes as the Data (Use and Access) Bill (DUAB), legislation aiming to toe the line between GDPR compliance and "business friendliness" – yep, the old "open for business" line is being rolled out.

Just a few steps away from becoming law, and the DUAB – like previous contender the Data Protection and Digital Information Bill (DPDIB) – aims to remove some of GDPR's limitations set out in the Data Protection Act 2018 while somehoe also ensuring continued compliance with the regulation to allow for smooth dealings with EU organizations.

The government says the DUAB will help the NHS, police forces, scientists, and businesses to make "better use" of data with easier sharing opportunities than the current law allows.

One key proposal is the introduction of data intermediaries – third parties trusted to facilitate the sharing of data between organizations under smart data schemes, which have so far satisfied the UK's data protection watchdog, the Information Commissioner's Office.

Their role will be to ensure data is shared only in line with the intended purpose and with ethical and regulatory requirements.

While this may resemble data brokerage, the UK government insists that data intermediaries and brokers serve distinct functions.

DSIT explained the difference in a separate call for evidence about these data intermediaries specifically, which also launched on Monday.

It said: "Data intermediaries are one way of facilitating the right to data portability, as they can enable data subjects to port their data from one data controller to another, acting on a data subject's behalf or in their interest. They differ from other data-driven companies such as data brokers, in that they rely on the agreement of the individual (the data subject) and act in their interest."

The data broker inquiry primarily focuses on security concerns – the national security risks they pose and the effectiveness of existing security measures and governance frameworks.

In contrast, the data intermediary inquiry examines their day-to-day operations, and what an effective intermediary looks like, rather than the potential cybersecurity pitfalls they too could bring to the table.

Those with a horse in this race have until May 12 to share their perspectives with DSIT.

The government is also aware that some questions demand answers that could expose commercially sensitive information. Details such as a data broker's security practices would be damaging in the wrong hands, but DSIT assures that any submitted data will be handled "carefully and securely." ®

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com