The Geospatial Commission has published the findings of an independent public dialogue on location data ethics - Public Dialogue on Location Data Ethics.
The Geospatial Commission is an expert committee that sets the UK’s geospatial strategy and promotes the best use of geospatial data. Providing guidance on how to unlock value from sensitive location data while mitigating security, ethical and privacy risks is a key commitment of the UK Geospatial Strategy.
The widespread use of new technologies means that data about our lives, including location data, is available in increasing frequency, detail and accuracy, driving innovation and better services.
In order to benefit from widespread use of location data, the Geospatial Commission views that it is important for data to be used in a way that mitigates concerns and retains public confidence.
This public dialogue opened a conversation with 85 members of the public from all four nations to gather evidence on public perceptions about location data use. The dialogue was supported by an independent and expert Oversight Group, which provided expert support and quality assurance from a diversity of perspectives.
The dialogue is one of the UK’s first on location data and was delivered by public engagement specialists Traverse and researchers from the Ada Lovelace Institute. Today’s report provides evidence on public perceptions about location data use, offering valuable insights into what citizens believe are the key benefits and concerns.
The project was launched in March and co-funded by the Geospatial Commission and UK Research and Innovation’s Sciencewise programme.
The findings outlined in this report will influence the guidance on location data ethics that the Geospatial Commission intends to publish in 2022 and help deliver the UK Geospatial Strategy.