The Sunday Telegraph

Firms to face surprise raids in data inquiry

- By Edward Malnick

BRITAIN’S data watchdog will be able to carry out unannounce­d raids on companies suspected of involvemen­t in illegally harvesting personal informatio­n, under major new powers being introduced in the wake of the Facebook data scandal, The Sunday Telegraph can disclose.

Ministers have drawn up legislatio­n allowing the Informatio­n Commission­er to carry out “no notice” inspection­s without a warrant.

The moves comes after MPs said it was “ludicrous” that Elizabeth Denham, the current watchdog, was forced to wait days before obtaining a warrant to raid the headquarte­rs of Cambridge

Analytica, a firm at the centre of the scandal. She said the company had failed to comply with her earlier requests for informatio­n.

Under the new powers, organisati­ons will be forced to hand over specific informatio­n within 24 hours of a request from the watchdog, with the prospect of criminal conviction­s for those who fail to comply. The commission­er will also be able to demand in- formation from former employees of firms to enable her to properly investigat­e allegation­s of “historical breaches” such as those being faced by Cambridge Analytica, officials said.

The new powers are contained in government amendments to the Data Protection Bill, which is currently passing through the Commons.

Matt Hancock, the Digital Secretary, told The Sunday Telegraph: “These new amendments will give the Informatio­n Commission­er the power she needs to act swiftly when people’s data has been breached and allow her to hold rogue companies to account. As recent events have shown, the public needs stronger protection so they can have confidence their data is safe.”

It comes as The Sunday Telegraph reveals Twitter sold data to the Cambridge University academic who harvested millions of Facebook users’ informatio­n without their knowledge.

Aleksandr Kogan, who created tools that allowed a political consultanc­y to psychologi­cally profile and target voters, bought the data from the microblogg­ing website in 2015, before the recent scandal came to light.

On Monday March 19, Ms Denham announced that she was seeking a warrant to search Cambridge Analytica’s London offices following claims that it had harvested private data on more than 50million Facebook users to sup- port Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al election campaign. However, it was not until the Friday evening that she was able to obtain a warrant and begin a search, following the adjournmen­t of a court hearing.

As a result of the amendments to the Data Protection Bill, the Informatio­n Commission­er “will now be able to demand access to an organisati­on’s premises to carry out ‘no notice’ inspection­s without a warrant”, a spokesman for the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport department said.

Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook founder, has apologised for the “major breach of trust” that saw informatio­n obtained by Cambridge Analytica.

Cambridge Analytica insists it acquired the informatio­n “legally and fairly” and has “robust data protection policies”. Business: Page 1

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