HomeInsightsInformation Commissioner’s Office consults on draft guidance on privacy enhancing technologies

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The ICO has published draft guidance on privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) to help organisations unlock the potential of data by putting a data protection by design approach into practice.

PETs are technologies that can help organisations share and use people’s data responsibly, lawfully, and securely, including by minimising the amount of data used and by encrypting or anonymising personal information.

The draft PETs guidance explains the benefits and different types of PETs currently available, as well as how they can help organisations comply with data protection law. It is part of the ICO’s draft guidance on anonymisation and pseudonymisation, which the ICO published in May 2021, and the ICO is seeking feedback to help refine and improve the final guidance. The deadline for responding to the consultation is 16 September 2022.

The ICO says that by enabling organisations to share and collaboratively analyse sensitive data in a privacy-preserving manner, PETs “open up unprecedented opportunities to harness the power of data through innovative and trustworthy applications”. The UK and US governments have launched a set of prize challenges to unleash the potential of PETs to tackle combat global societal challenges, supported by the ICO.

The PETs draft guidance has been published ahead of the 2022 roundtable of G7 data protection and privacy authorities, which took place in Bonn, Germany on 7-8 September 2022, where the ICO presented its work on PETs to its G7 counterparts and encouraged international agreement for the support of responsible and innovative use of PETs.

As part of this, the ICO says that it will call for the development of industry-led governance, such as codes of conduct and certification schemes, to help organisations use PETs responsibly and to help PETs developers and providers to build the technology with data protection and privacy at the forefront.

Information Commissioner, John Edwards, said: “It’s not just regulators that need to take action – we need the industry to step up, too. We want organisations to come to us with codes of conduct and certification schemes, for example, to show their commitment to building services or products that are designed in a privacy-friendly way and that protect people’s data”. To read the ICO’s news release in full and for a link to the draft guidance and consultation, click here

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