Scottish Daily Mail

WE KNOW EVERYTHING ABOUT YOU

Sinister boast of data boss who says he has 5,000 pieces of personal informatio­n on EVERY British family – from your salary to your health products and the ages of your children . . .

- by Katherine Faulkner MAIL INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

‘Whenever you fill in a mortgage form, we get that informatio­n’ ‘We get people asking: How do you know that?’

IT IS a firm you will never have heard of – but it boasts that it knows everything about you.

From your salary to the ages of your children and even which DVD you rented last weekend, B2C Data has a ‘rich and complex’ picture of every family in Britain.

Minutes into a phone conversati­on with our undercover reporter, the firm’s sales director boasted it held 5,000 pieces of personal informatio­n for every household.

‘Literally we know what clothes they buy, what health products they buy, where they go on holiday, how many times they go on holiday, what income they’ve got, whether they have children,’ sales director Gareth Doran – a convicted fraudster – boasted from his home in Marbella.

Days later, over a pot of tea in a London hotel, his silver-haired colleague Nick Sayer casually revealed how this shadowy company had compiled such an extraordin­ary amount of data. Flashing his expensive silver watch as he sipped, he said he had persuaded 250 British companies trusted by millions to pass on detailed informatio­n about their customers.

Perhaps most shockingly of all, he claimed to have access to individual­s’ financial informatio­n – including confidenti­al details of the size of their pension pots.

The informatio­n was obtained, he claimed, via a secret agreement between B2C and the UK’s largest financial advice group. Through this deal – kept secret from customers under a non-disclosure agreement – he claimed he was able to access confidenti­al details handed to mortgage advisers who worked with the finance firm. In return, he maintained their customer database for free.

‘Whenever you fill in a mortgage applicatio­n, you have to give your employment, your income, any investment­s,’ he explained. ‘We get all that informatio­n on a million people.’

Supplying the financial data of 15,000 pensioners and investors to the Mail’s fictional cold-calling company would be ‘no problem’.

Sayer claimed to have similar deals with 250 household-name firms – including a highstreet retail giant and a well-known holiday company. As a result, B2C had compiled an extraordin­arily detailed picture of the lives of millions, he said.

Every time someone books a holiday, buys a TV or applies for a mortgage with one of the major firms who supply data, B2C gets an update for its massive database. ‘It’s amazing,’ he grinned. ‘The more you dig into it... you think: Crikey, they know everything about us.’

The amount of data B2C holds – and the way it is selling it – was described by the Informatio­n Commission­er last night as ‘on the face of it, a very worrying breach of the Data Protection Act’.

When explaining where B2C got its data from, Sayer claimed it was all agreed under a secret deal with the financial advice network Sesame – which processes one in six mortgage applicatio­ns in the UK.

Sesame furiously denies any deal with B2C or Sayer and says it does not sell its customers’ data under any circumstan­ces. Last night independen­t experts compared a sample of the data provided to the Mail with that from Sesame and confirmed the data was categorica­lly not on Sesame’s database.

An urgent investigat­ion is now underway into how Sayer was able to provide us with pensions and investment­s data on 15,000 people.

During the meeting, Sayer – the production director in charge of building B2C’s huge database – smilingly admitted he had been dubbed a wheeler-dealer ‘Del Boy’ by friends but insisted the label was unfair.

He did admit it was his third attempt at running a data company, after giving up his career as a profession­al diver. But he shrugged: ‘It’s all business partner problems. First one done me for a load of money, second one turned out to be a cocaine addict and never showed up.’ Sayer admitted the trade in personal data was a ‘cut throat kind of industry’. There were, he said, ‘a lot of very, very unscrupulo­us people in data’ – adding quickly: ‘I like to think I’m not one of them.’

But when the reporter told him she wanted to start a cold-calling operation selling investment­s to pensioners, he was more than happy to sell the salary, pension and investment details of 15,000 people, along with their addresses, ages and telephone numbers.

No checks were made on who our reporter’s firm was, or for what it intended to use this informatio­n.

The most basic enquiries would have revealed that the outfit he was selling to was fictional, as were the names he was given. The ‘invest- ment firm’ comprised no more than a website and a few business cards. Yet Sayer said he had ‘no problem’ handing over as many pension records as desired. ‘Rich people,’ he said. ‘You want people with the biggest pension pots you can find.’

Selling data on pensions was routine business for B2C, he said – particular­ly at the moment.

Pensions were currently ‘hot business’ and the company was selling on its detailed pension pot informatio­n ‘ten times a month, maybe’.

‘Everyone wants to know everything about these people,’ Sayer added. ‘So for example, you’ll want the pension data, and you’ll want to know what their pension pot is, what their income is, what sort of house value they’ve got, all that kind of stuff, which is fine.

‘I don’t mind putting all that on the data for you. I’ve got no problem with that.’ However, he said our cold-callers should be careful not to reveal much informatio­n they had on people. ‘Because we get a million people phoning us up saying, “How do you know that?”.’ Days after the Mail’s meeting with Sayer, our undercover reporters called sales director Doran, confirming we would like to buy the pensions data. Incredibly, Doran even suggested to our reporter that she could buy the data off the books – outside of the B2C business – as a way of avoiding the tax payable.

Doran, who has served a jail sentence for fraud after he was caught using fake bank notes, said this would be a ‘favour to a friend’. He suggested she transfer £5,000 straight into Sayer’s personal bank account to seal the deal, promising the data would be sent straight afterwards. When she told him she would rather buy the data through the business,

 ??  ?? Brazen: Nick Sayer of B2C Data boasts to an undercover Mail reporter
Brazen: Nick Sayer of B2C Data boasts to an undercover Mail reporter
 ??  ?? Unashamed: Sayer tells how his firm gets secret data from companies
Unashamed: Sayer tells how his firm gets secret data from companies

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