Finance

South: HMRC allegedly 'breached data protection laws'

Published by
TBM Team

HMRC is under investigation by the Information Commissioner following a complaint that the tax authority has breached data protection laws by saving taxpayers’ voices without their consent.

The privacy watchdog Big Brother Watch alleges that HMRC has collected 5.1 million taxpayers’ voiceprints in this manner.

Tax expert Owen Kyffin, director of Whitley Simpson, which is one of the largest accountancy practices in the area with offices in Banbury, Bicester, High Wycombe and Witney, explained: “Callers to HMRC are told to repeat the phrase: ‘My voice is my password’ on an automated phone line before being able to access the department’s services. Big Brother Watch claims this amounts to ‘being railroaded into a mass ID scheme’, as callers are not given the choice to opt in or out.”

After members of the public raised concerns, Big Brother Watch tested the system and found there is no option for callers to opt out of the ID scheme, or have their voiceprint securely deleted. They also claim that the HMRC has refused to disclose which other government departments the voice IDs have been shared with, how the IDs are stored and used, whether it is possible to delete a voice ID, which legal territory the data is kept in, how much the scheme has cost taxpayers, or the legally-required “privacy impact assessment”.’ The watchdog submitted Freedom of Information requests that revealed just how much data has been gathered.

Kyffin added: “HMRC insists callers access their information in this way: those that refuse are repeatedly instructed by the automated line, ‘It’s important you repeat exactly the same phrase - please say “My voice is my password’. Big Brother Watch claims the process amounts to collecting biometric data ‘by the back door’.”

These voice IDs could allow ordinary citizens to be identified by government agencies across other areas of their private lives. The watchdog also claims the security of voice ID is dubious, citing a BBC investigation last year where a reporter was able to trick HSBC’s system into allowing access to a bank account. A spokesperson at the Information Commissioner’s Office said: "We have received a complaint about HMRC’s voice ID scheme and will be making enquiries."

TBM Team

Recent Posts

Halma acquires safety tech firm MK Test in £44m deal

Buckinghamshire tech company Halma has acquired transport safety firm MK Test Systems Limited. Headquartered in…

3 days ago

Paragon Bank provides finance for West Sussex housing development

BRiCS Development has secured an £11.55 million finance facility with Paragon Bank’s Development Finance team…

3 days ago

IT firm Mintivo appoints new Managing Director

IT services and solutions company Mintivo has appointed Alex Jukes as its new Managing Director…

3 days ago

Bartlett Tree Experts to build new research facility in Wokingham woodland

Bartlett Tree Experts have announced its intention to build a new arboretum and research facility…

3 days ago

New £3m imaging system to be developed at University of Surrey

The creation of a first-of-its-kind imaging system at the University of Surrey could help the…

3 days ago

New chair of trustees at Open Sight Hampshire

Open Sight, which provides support across Hampshire to those living with or at risk of…

3 days ago