back to article Google: Our DeepMind health slurp is completely kosher

Google’s DeepMind operation insists UK patients have nothing to worry about now that Google has absorbed the subsidiary - but lawyers and privacy campaigners have raised doubts. DeepMind told The Reg: “It is false to say that Google is 'absorbing' data. This data is not DeepMind’s or Google’s – it belongs to our partners, …

  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    You would think

    that all those tinfoil hats, you wouldn't actually want people working on cures for cancer using big data..

    1. Wellyboot Silver badge

      Re: You would think

      Cures yes, great, think of the childen.

      Who trusts Google to do nothing else with it.

    2. Skwosh

      Re: You would think

      All those Google shills, you'd almost think they wouldn't want anyone to scrutinise a massive advertising company potentially getting access to medical records when that company happens to make almost all of its money by mercilessly extracting personal information from as many people as it possibly can...

    3. JohnFen

      Re: You would think

      The problem here is that Google is involved. If Google is involved with something, extreme suspicion and distrust is entirely warranted.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: You would think

        How is that tinfoil hat? It's clearly mentioned this is anonymous data, in the same way Apple harvest anonymous data. But of course, you trust them, because Tim Cook said so...

        The google haters are are gullible idiots.

        1. JohnFen

          Re: You would think

          "It's clearly mentioned this is anonymous data"

          You say that as if it's meaningful. Just calling the data "anonymized" is meaningless. Most popular methods of "anonymizing" data is ineffective in the face of Big Data, which often makes deanonymizing data very easy to do. Some forms can be effective (such as only keeping data aggregated with that of large numbers of other people and deleting individual data records), but we don't know if that's what they're doing or not.

          If not, then "anonymous data" is effectively a lie.

          1. rdhood

            re:"anonymous data" is effectively a lie.

            Bingo. Data taken out of context is much less useful. Data in context is not anonymous if one looks closely enough.

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: You would think

      you wouldn't actually want people working on cures for cancer using big data

      A Cure for Cancer

      A Cure for Cancer is a novel by British fantasy and science fiction writer Michael Moorcock, first published in London 1971 by Allison and Busby. The book is part of Moorcock's long-running Jerry Cornelius series.

      The second novel of the sequence is essentially a collage of absurdist vignettes, many of which first appeared in an eclectic range of British and American magazines.

      Plot

      Jerry inhabits a world at war with itself and, armed only with an occasional "vibragun" appears to fight "against history" for the freedom of "randomness" against the straitlaced conventions exemplified by his brother Frank. In the end Jerry's quest, oblique as it is, is perhaps more artistic than political.

      Sounds rather apposite.

      1. JohnFen
        Pint

        Re: You would think

        "Sounds rather apposite."

        Kudos on using a word that, in my opinion, isn't used nearly enough! Have a beer on me.

      2. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

        Re: You would think

        The book is part of Moorcock's long-running Jerry Cornelius series.

        Which is one of his least readable and enjoyable..

        (IMHO of course.)

  2. Wellyboot Silver badge
    Coffee/keyboard

    Google & pesonal medical data

    Lawyer says >>> It may be that there is no controversy whatsoever<<<

    If he can keep a straight face while giving that line out I'm never playing poker with him!

    1. Someone Else Silver badge

      Re: Google & pesonal medical data

      He's a lawyer. They're required to undergo a radical ethicsectomy before being admitted to the bar. The ability to say such things with a straight face is an indication of the success of the procedure.

  3. TimMaher Silver badge

    Linklaters

    They produced an analysis for the Royal Free, see https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/files.royalfree.nhs.uk/Reporting/Streams_Report.pdf.

    I have read the foreword, the management summary and the bit tacked on about GDPR.

    Then I got bored.

    It would seem that any use of patient personal data for purposes other than those explicitly set out in the contract will be illegal, either by DeepThroat or Google.

    Doesn’t mean they won’t do it though.

    Also, should that AWS s3 bucket have been open?

    1. Andrew Orlowski (Written by Reg staff)
      Holmes

      Re: Linklaters

      "It would seem that any use of patient personal data for purposes other than those explicitly set out in the contract will be illegal"

      This is the Linklaters report paid for by the Royal Free. In it, everything's lovely. There's nothing to worry about. Unicorns have even been sighted in the meadow.

      Story: Audit of DeepMind deal with NHS trust: It checks out, nothing to see here

      https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/06/13/royal_free_deepmind_deal_audit/

      No one else seems particularly reassured. The only opinion that matters here though is the ICO and they have yet to deliver their verdict.

      Do you feel more confident now you know that Google/DeepMind doesn't actually *know* who owns the data, and falsely asserts that the Trust owns it?

      1. Tommy L

        Re: Linklaters

        I don’t get this. Surely you would just look at the contract the Royal Free has with DeepMind (released under FoIA).

        It says the patient records can only be used to provide the App, must be stored within England, not disclosed to any third party (which includes Google), cannot be linked to any other data etc.

        I just don’t see anyway DeepMind could provide any access to this data to the rest of Google without breaching that contract. That’s just a fact.

  4. nematoad
    WTF?

    Oh, really?

    " It may be that there is no controversy whatsoever..."

    This is Google we are talking about, isn't it? Their track record regarding the use of other peoples data isn't exactly reassuring.

  5. Pascal Monett Silver badge

    "nothing will change without our consent"

    So says the new babe on the market.

    When you're working with Google, one thing is certain : you're not the one altering the deal.

    Where's the Vader icon when you need one ?

  6. This post has been deleted by its author

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Do bears defecate in the woods?

    "Will there be any sharing or profiling or access to data, going beyond what a patient in the UK will ever have expected from their medical practitioner?”

    1. This post has been deleted by its author

  8. Adair Silver badge

    GDPR

    Under GDPR won't Google have to go back to every individual whose records are involved and ask nicely if they want their records to be used under their new ownership?

    1. ThatOne Silver badge

      Re: GDPR

      ... or they can just sell it and in case of problems blame those who bought it.

      Much more profitable.

  9. Robert D Bank

    NO...but ..but...NO.

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