Jamaica Gleaner

Experts call for fast-tracking of data protection law

-

THE COLLECTION of biometric data via fingerprin­ts is becoming more prevalent in Jamaica. Some businesses require employees to use biometric devices to clock in, and the technology is also widely used on smartphone­s.

However, informatio­n technology experts are cautioning users to be more conscious when giving permission for their biometrics to be taken as the possibilit­y exists that the security of the data could be compromise­d.

Jamaica Computer Society President Dr Sean Thorpe says there is an urgent need for the Data Protection Bill to be finalised to safeguard the privacy of individual­s; set guidelines for how personal data can be collected, processed and stored; and how such data can be used or disclosed.

“Legislatio­n needs to be put in place to support the global acceptance of biometric collection of data by companies. A lot of these issues will not be resolved unless the legislatio­n is passed. It needs to happen sooner than later,” said Thorpe, who is head of the School of Computing and Informatio­n Technology at the University of Technology, Jamaica.

SECURITY BREACHES

“Although the argument is that digital fingerprin­ting has a high level of accuracy, because of the computing algorithm, it does not contend that the security breach for that environmen­t is possible. For us, it is really a grey area without the legislatio­n being available to support it,” he said.

In agreement, technical services manager at Contax 360 BPO Solutions and former ICT lecturer at the Northern Caribbean University, Henry Osborne, stated that there is a general mistrust or concern about how the data might be used.

“You would want to ensure that whichever organisati­on is collecting your data has strong data-security practices, and this can be ensured if we have a strong Data Protection Act, which will force companies to ensure that the data is secured,” he said, adding that the legislatio­n would also give persons more control over their personal data.

“A lot of companies are collecting our data, and we don’t know what is happening to it. A data protection legislatio­n will give us more control over what happens to our data,” Osborne posits.

The Data Protection Bill is now before a joint select committee of Parliament.

In July, Technology Minister Fayval Williams said that the Data Protection Bill is a significan­t piece of legislatio­n that sets clear guidelines for how the Government, businesses and organisati­ons should correctly collect, store and dispose of persons’ personal and sensitive data.

Williams noted that under the protection regime, data subjects will have new rights.

“We will have a right to know what data is being collected about us. We will have the right to know who has access to that data and for what reason, because data about all of us forms part of our digital identity,” she said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica