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Comparing the protection and use of online personal information in South Africa and the United Kingdom in line with data protection requirements

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dc.contributor.author Da Veiga, Adele
dc.contributor.author Vorster, Ruthea
dc.contributor.author Fudong, Li
dc.contributor.author Nathan, Clarke
dc.contributor.author Steven M., Furnell
dc.date.accessioned 2020-10-30T07:38:07Z
dc.date.available 2020-10-30T07:38:07Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.citation Da Veiga, A, Vorscer, R., Li, F., Clarke, N. and Furnell, S.M. (2019}, "Comparing che protection and use of on line personal information in South Africa and the United Kingdom in line wich daca proteccion requirements", Information and Computer Security, Vol. 28 No. 3, pp. 399-422. https://doi.org/ 10.1108/ICS-11-2018-0135 en
dc.identifier.issn 2056-4961
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/ 10.1108/ICS-11-2018-0135
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26782
dc.description.abstract Purpose: This research investigates the difference between South Africa (SA) and the United Kingdom (UK) in terms of data protection compliance with the aim to establish if a country that has had data protection in place for a longer period of time has a higher level of compliance with data protection requirements in comparison with a country that is preparing for compliance. Design/methodology/approach: An insurance industry multi-case study within the online insurance services environment was conducted. Personal Information (PI) of four newly created consumer profiles was deposited to 10 random insurance organisation websites in each country to evaluate a number of data privacy requirements of the Data Protection Act (DPA) and Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA). Findings: The results demonstrate that not all the websites honored the selected opt-out preferences as direct marketing material from the insurance organisations in the sample was sent to both the SA and UK consumer profiles. Forty-two unsolicited third party contacts were received by the SA consumer profiles whereas the UK consumer profiles did not re-ceive any third party direct marketing. It was also found that the minimality principle is not always met by both SA and UK organisations. Research implications: As a jurisdiction with a heavy stance towards privacy implementation and regulation, it was found that the UK is more compliant than SA in terms of implementation of the evaluated data protection requirements included in the scope of this study, however not fully compliant. Originality/value: Based upon the results obtained from this research, it suggests that the SA insurance organisations should ensure that the non-compliance aspects relating to direct marketing and sharing data with third parties are addressed. SA insurance companies should learn from the manner in which the UK insurance organisations implement these privacy requirements. Furthermore, the UK insurance organisations should focus on improved compliance for direct marking and the minimality principle. The study indicate the positive role that data protection legislation plays in a county like the UK with a more mature stance toward compliance with data protection legislation. en
dc.description.sponsorship This research is supported by the Women in Research (WiR) Grant from the University of South Africa. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Elsevier en
dc.subject POPIA en
dc.subject Protection of Personal Information Act en
dc.subject privacy en
dc.subject DPA en
dc.subject Data Protection Act en
dc.subject GDPR en
dc.subject General Data Protection Regulation en
dc.subject personal information en
dc.subject consumer en
dc.subject direct marketing en
dc.subject opt-in en
dc.subject opt-out en
dc.subject compliance en
dc.subject legal en
dc.title Comparing the protection and use of online personal information in South Africa and the United Kingdom in line with data protection requirements en
dc.type Preprint Article en
dc.description.department School of Computing en


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