Australia's Privacy Commissioner has ruled that the Australian Department of Health unintentionally breached Australian Privacy law when it published the possessively de-identified health data of 10 per cent of the population from Medicare Benefits Scheme (MBS) and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).
When researchers at the University of Melbourne re-identified the data they matched at least seven well known Australians including members of parliament by crossing the data with other sources such as Wikipedia, Facebook and news websites. The Australian Health department must in future review and enhance its data governance and release processes with oversight from the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner. The dataset containing the health data was around 3 billion lines long covering 2.5 million people and was downloaded around 1500 times.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 01 2018, @02:37AM
Is to periodically hold their feet over a fire. And not the metaphoric kind. The alternative is for a few of them to be set on fire periodically when they screw up, to provide a brightly ingrained reminder to other politicians to be competent in their jobs or GTFO. The current issues in governments around the world are lack of accountability due to their constituents not maiming or murdering a few of them in order to get them to mend their ways.