Experian rejects ID theft notification proposal

Experian rejects ID theft notification proposal | Channel Register: Credit rating giant Experian has rejected the notion of automatically informing UK citizens when their ID details may have been hijacked.

Experian's hardline stance came at a conference on 'Big Brother Britain' in London today, where a number of speakers said that more severe penalties and obligations should be imposed on companies to ensure data individuals' privacy concerns are taken seriously.

Anna Fielder, policy consultant at the National Consumer Council, said the UK should follow the example of California, where companies who expose individuals' data have to contact and notify the individuals concerned.

She added that the UK should adopt another US trend, where customers have the right to lock or freeze their credit records, with companies only able to access records on the individual's say so.

However, Gillian Key-Vice, Experience's director of regulatory affairs, rejected the idea of a notification scheme.

Key-Vice said that while she recognised why people might "think it's a good idea", such a scheme could cause "unnecessary concern" amongst individuals where a breach has already been "managed".

(Read Original Article - Via Channel Register.)