Analysis

How many organisations hold your personal data?

5th September 2016
Nat Bowers
0

A new survey, commissioned by sensitive data experts, Ground Labs, has found that many people underestimate how many organisations currently hold sensitive information about them. The research would suggest that the average UK consumer is actually far more giving than they realise.

When asked how many organisations they believed held their personal data, the majority (84%) of consumers guessed at fewer than twenty.  In fact, almost a third (28%) guessed that fewer than ten organisations hold sensitive data about them. However, once presented with a list of fifty online services and retailers, two out of five customers calculated that the reality was significantly higher than their original estimate. This was based on their knowledge of interactions in the past 12 months alone.

The survey only offered fifty examples across the many thousands of organisations currently in receipt of customer data - from airlines and retailers to online services and utility companies.

John Cassidy, Vice President EMEA, Ground Labs, commented: “Unless customers have an accurate idea of who has access to their data, they are unable to take the precautions necessary to protect themselves online. Customers dramatically underestimate how many companies have access to their information, as illustrated by our survey. We only asked people to pick from fifty of the biggest online companies, in reality, the number of organisations who have access to any one individual’s data is much, much higher than our survey suggests.”

According to Ground Labs, the total number of companies you interact with is simply a starting point. Automatic backups, log files and emails, plus companies who legally share information with third parties can generate hundreds and thousands of potential copies of your data both on and offline. On top of this, many companies will keep records of former customers for months or even years.

Cassidy added: “A conservative estimate would suggest that for any given adult, hundreds of thousands of copies of personal data reside on physical devices and cloud storage platforms both in and outside of the UK. Most people are unaware of the multiplying effect when dealing with so many service providers and so the responsibility must fall on companies to protect this sensitive data.”

New figures from the Office of National Statistics show that fraud and cyber-crime are the most common types of crime in the UK, with nearly six million offences committed last year alone.

Ground Labs, a company specialising in sensitive data security, has launched new software called Enterprise Recon 2. The platform can be deployed within hours to hunt down more than 100 types of personal information then safely isolate and delete if necessary. Importantly, it enables employees to search files previously considered difficult to catalogue such as scanned images and audio recordings.

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