- Home
- Governance
- Governing Authority
- Membership of Governing Authority
- Committees of Governing Authority
- Schedule of Meetings of Governing Authority
- Reports to Staff of Governing Body Meetings
- Due Dates for Meeting Documentation
- Regulation on Conduct of Governing Authority Business
- Decisions reserved to Governing Authority
- Code of Conduct for Governing Authority Members
- University Governance
- Statutes & Regulations
- University Companies
- Governing Authority
- Legal & Information Compliance
- Enterprise Risk Management
- University Safety Policy
- Training Timetable
- Safety Statements
- Incident Reporting
- Risk Assessment
- Emergencies
- Fieldwork
- Staff Safety Representatives
- Ventilation
- Health and Safety
- About
- Training
- University Safety Policies
- Managing Health & Safety
- Safety Statements
- Risk Assessments
- Occupational Health & Ergonomics
- Fieldwork
- Staff Safety Reps
- Permit to Work
- Other Safety Contacts
- Occupational Hygiene
- Blended Working Risk Assessments
- Research Projects/Lab Adaptations
- Health & Safety Authority Inspections
- Ventilation
- Radiation, Ionising and Non-Ionising
- Health & Safety and Security
- Health & Safety for Student Activity
- Incidents & Emergencies
- Policies
- Contact Us
Privacy by Design & Default
Privacy by Design means that organisations need to consider privacy at the initial design stages and throughout the complete development process of new products, processes or services that involve processing personal data.
Privacy by Default means that when a system or service includes choices for the individual on how much personal data he/she shares with others, the default settings should be the most privacy friendly ones.
It has always been good practice to adopt privacy by design as a default approach; privacy by design and the minimisation of data have always been implicit requirements of the data protection principles. However, the GDPR enshrines both the principle of ‘privacy by design’ and the principle of ‘privacy by default’ in law. This means that service settings must be automatically privacy friendly, and requires that the development of services and products takes account of privacy considerations from the outset.