| Being in the cloud doesn't change responsibility levels |
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Friday 28th September, 2012 For a variety of reasons, more and more businesses are looking to use cloud computing, but data protection regulator ICO is concerned that many businesses do not realise they remain responsible for how the data is looked after, even after passing it to the cloud network provider. That’s prompted the ICO to produce a guide to cloud computing, to help businesses comply with the law. The guide gives tips including:
Speaking as the guide was launched, author Dr Simon Rice, ICO technology policy advisor, said:
The ICO recently issued a monetary penalty of £250,000 to Scottish Borders Council, after it failed to properly manage a company it had employed to digitise pension records. The council did not have a contract with the contractor, and hadn’t made the necessary security checks. Simon added: “Figures show that consumers are concerned about how secure their data is when they use cloud storage themselves. It takes little imagination to consider that businesses not reflecting those concerns will quickly find themselves losing customers’ good will.” A recent online YouGov survey commissioned by the ICO found that 46 per cent of UK adults online who use cloud storage are concerned about the security of their information in cloud storage. The survey also found that only 39 per cent of adults online realised that social media used cloud storage to store personal data, while 46 per cent did not realise that by hosting their information on cloud servers, their information could be being stored anywhere in the world.
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