cover image: Big Brother Watch’s briefing on benefits and financial mass surveillance powers in

20.500.12592/0zpcfk3

Big Brother Watch’s briefing on benefits and financial mass surveillance powers in

25 Mar 2024

(…) This is in addition to the previous underpayment of £1.2 billion affecting 165,000 pensioners due to historical errors by DWP.”5 The State Pension is one of the benefits the government plans to target with this surveillance power, However, DWP is only seeking to use the proposed power to “recover monies owed to DWP”6 – not to pay the billions of pounds underpaid and owed to citizens. [...] Paragraph 1(2) of proposed new Schedule 3B of the SSA imposes only one purpose limitation: that the Secretary of State’s power to issue an AIN “may be exercised only for the purpose of assisting the Secretary of State in identifying cases which merit further consideration to establish whether relevant benefits are being paid or have been paid in accordance with the enactments and rules of law rela. [...] This would allow for an incredibly broad scope of information to be requested and stands in contrast to the GDPR principle of data minimisation.19 The lack of legislative limitations would allow for extensive information about a person to be collected and means that the scope of scanning criteria could change at any time. [...] In December 2023, the Public Accounts Committee noted that the DWP has not been clear as to what proportion of benefit claims have been subject to this algorithmic surveillance, nor has it published any assessment of the impact on customers.39 Big Brother Watch shares the Committee’s concerns about the lack of transparency surrounding these tools and the lack of consideration of claimants who may. [...] It is vital that Clause 128 and Schedule 11 are removed to prevent expansive surveillance of millions of members of the public with disproportionate detrimental impact upon the 40%+ of the population in receipt of or linked to benefits payments.
Pages
20
Published in
United Kingdom