Highway robbery - DVLA sells your details

Highway robbery - DVLA sells your details

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ERIKTHEVETKING

Original Poster:

434 posts

221 months

Wednesday 11th June 2008
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Highway robbery - DVLA sells your details

There was a time when we never had to think about where our private details would end up. It was not that long ago but I am finding it harder to remember. Now it is the norm to tick (or un-tick) boxes to avoid ending up on ever-growing and useless mailing lists. But here's the best abuse of this type I have come across in years.... £15million raked in by the DVLA over the last five years by flogging our names and addresses to...clamping firms and car park operators.

Nearly 70 private firms, including bailiffs, debt collectors, solicitors and finance companies, are allowed access to the database of the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency, which holds personal information about Britain's 38 million drivers. The idea is they can then chase motorists whom they accuse of parking on privately owned land or staying too long in supermarket, hospital and railway car parks.

One of the DVLA 'approved' information recipients is a company called National Clamps, which admits to immobilising 10,000 vehicles a year, London parking enforcer VCS, which won the RAC's "Dick Turpin" award in 2005 for the "legalised mugging" of drivers, and Excel Parking Services, whose claim against a motorist over a £300 unpaid fine was thrown out of court in March after the judge said Excel's high charges were intended to "frighten or intimidate" so were unlawful.

Truly, the DVLA does not know a great deal about who is getting their mitts on this info or what happens to it after it has been sold. They are said to turn down just 2% of requests for personal details from the firms they sell to, despite a supposed clampdown by the government on this extremely dodgy money-making scam. Currently, private companies can pay £2.50 per address or £3,000 a year to get online database access.









roscobbc

3,584 posts

248 months

Wednesday 11th June 2008
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I wonder if the European courts would ratify this action (probably)its an affront against civil libertys

THX138

483 posts

199 months

Wednesday 11th June 2008
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Funny how the oft quoted 'Data Protection' act is ignored in these cases isn't it?

V10 BAT

1,718 posts

240 months

Wednesday 11th June 2008
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a couple of years back my wife returned home from work and said she was sure she had been followed home.yep the next night we found no rs turbo on the drive.
seems like they wont have to follow you home now,just make a note of the reg.
can we say driveway robbery.