The UK's GPS Tagging of Migrants Has Been Ruled Illegal

WIRED 

The way the UK government has been tagging migrants with GPS trackers is illegal, the country's privacy regulator ruled on Friday, in a rebuke to officials who have been experimenting with migrant-surveillance tech in both the UK and the US. As part of an 18-month pilot that concluded in December, the UK interior ministry, known as the Home Office, forced up to 600 people who arrived in the country without permission to wear ankle tags that continuously tracked their locations. However, that pilot broke UK data protection law because it did not properly assess the privacy intrusion of GPS tracking or give migrants clear information about the data that was being collected, the UK's Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) said today. The ruling means the Home Office has 28 days to update its policies around GPS tracking. Friday's decision also means the ICO could fine the Home Office up to 17.5 million ( 22 million) or 4 percent of its turnover--whichever is higher--if it resumes tagging people who arrive on the UK south coast in small boats from Europe.

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