In the UK, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has asked the Department of Health (DoH) for clarification about its online data sharing agreement with Facebook.The issue first came to light last week, when a University of Southampton researcher noticed that every time a user visits an NHS Choices web site containing the Facebook 'Like' button, data about which page they are viewing is passed back to the social networking site.
Labour MP Tom Watson has also complained to Health Secretary Andrew Lansley about the code on the site, which enables Facebook and other firms to track the medical conditions users have searched.
He is today joined by the ICO, which has contacted the DoH to find out whether any details of individuals consulting the NHS Choices web site are available to third parties.
The DoH says it will be issuing the ICO with a 'full clarification' of its agreement with Facebook and other third parties, but has not yet removed the 'Like' button from the NHS Choices site.
'When users sign up to Facebook they agree Facebook can gather information on their web use,' the DoH said in a statement. 'NHS Choices privacy policy, which is on the homepage of the site, makes this clear. We advise that people log out of Facebook properly, not just close the window, to ensure no inadvertent data transfer.'
NHS Choices is at www.nhs.uk .
All articles 2006-23 written and edited by Mel Crowther and/or Nick Thomas, 2024- by Nick Thomas, unless otherwise stated.
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