What are the 8 Data Protection Principles 1998?
What are the Eight Principles of the Data Protection Act?
| 1998 Act | GDPR |
|---|---|
| Principle 1 – fair and lawful | Principle (a) – lawfulness, fairness and transparency |
| Principle 2 – purposes | Principle (b) – purpose limitation |
| Principle 3 – adequacy | Principle (c) – data minimisation |
| Principle 4 – accuracy | Principle (d) – accuracy |
What is Data Protection Act in simple words?
The Data Protection Act (DPA) is a United Kingdom Act of Parliament which was passed in 1988. It was developed to control how personal or customer information is used by organisations or government bodies. It protects people and lays down rules about how data about people can be used.
Which of these is a principle under the Data Protection Act 1998?
Personal data shall be obtained only for one or more specified and lawful purposes, and shall not be further processed in any manner incompatible with that purpose or those purposes. Personal data shall be adequate, relevant and not excessive in relation to the purpose or purposes for which they are processed.
What is data protection principles?
Lawfulness, fairness, and transparency: Any processing of personal data should be lawful and fair. It should be transparent to individuals that personal data concerning them are collected, used, consulted, or otherwise processed and to what extent the personal data are or will be processed.
What are three principles of the Data Protection Act?
Lawfulness, fairness and transparency. Purpose limitation. Data minimisation. Accuracy.
What is Principle 5 of the GDPR?
Personal data shall be: processed lawfully, fairly and in a transparent manner in relation to the data subject (‘lawfulness, fairness and transparency’);