¶ … Protection Act (1998) was instituted in order to protect the privacy of individuals in terms of communication. The fundamentals of this Act are: (i) data may only be used for the specific purposes for which it was collected, (ii) with certain exceptions, data may only be shared with other parties with key individual's authorizations, (iii) with certain exceptions, key individual's have a right to know about personally-relevant data. (iv) Personal information must be updated and maintained only for requisite time. (v) Personal information may only be sent outside European Economic Area with individual's consent, (vi) with exceptions, all entities that process personal information must register with the Information Commissioner's Office, (vii) security measures, such as firewalls must be in place for all entities holding personal information, and staff must be fully equipped so that no leakage occurs, (viii) factually incorrect information must be corrected (JISC Legal, 2007).
Communications Act 2003
This Act is concerned with British media, specifically radio and TV it passed measures that included the following: It became illegal to use other people's wifi connections without their permission; Community Radio received legal recognition; many restrictions on cross-media ownership were lifted; and non-British entities could own a British television company. It was effective in encouraging fulltime Community Radio services in the UK (Legislation.gov.uk. [online]).
REGULATION
Self-regulatory and non-statutory,...
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