Information Commissioner's Office Reviews 500

TrustScore 1 out of 5

1.1

While we don't verify specific claims because reviewers' opinions are their own, we may label reviews as "Verified" when we can confirm a business interaction took place. Read more

To protect platform integrity, every review on our platform—verified or not—is screened by our 24/7 automated software. This technology is designed to identify and remove content that breaches our guidelines, including reviews that are not based on a genuine experience. We recognise we may not catch everything, and you can flag anything you think we may have missed. Read more

Review summary

Created with AI, based on recent reviews

Looking at 93 reviews, most reviewers were let down by their experience overall. Many people were dissatisfied with the company's ethics and overall conduct. Customers frequently reported issues with the company's response time, noting that it took months to receive a reply, often a template response that didn't address their specific complaints. Reviewers also found the service to be unhelpful and ineffective, with staff often described as rude and unwilling to assist. Many struggled to contact the company, experiencing cut-offs on the phone and unhelpful live chat interactions. Concerns were also raised regarding the staff's understanding of basic statutory matters and the company's handling of customer data.

What people talk about most

Ethics

Users describe negative interactions with ethics, expressing strong dissatisfaction with the lack of... See more

Response time

Customers had negative experiences with response times. Many reviewers report significant delays, with some... See more

Service

Consumers find service to be negative, with many describing it as ineffective, slow, and unresponsive.... See more

Customer communications

People report negative experiences with contact, citing difficulties in reaching companies and receiving... See more

Staff

Reviewers highlight negative aspects of staff. Many customers describe staff as useless, uninterested, and... See more

Reviews shaping this summary

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Disgusting disappointed, After siding with me on a call Helen Armstrong changed her mind I provided evidence she didnt, no reason maybe shes a loon who likes covering up for criminals.... Well don... See more

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Absolute shameful organization, that claims it can help - but never does. When the GDPR came into place it infected every organisation to comply - or else. It made Companies' processes a misery and pe... See more

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Contacted them after Equifax told me that they had breached DPA by telling me the answers to my security questions without doing security. Provided a screenshot of their admission. Received a res... See more

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Wow. They have now excelled themselves in uselessness. NHS hospital completely ignored all ICO letters on my DPA case. ICO say nothing further they can do! What a joke. Organisations and state bo... See more


Company details

  1. Information Service
  2. Charity
  3. Non-Profit Organization

Information provided by various external sources

The Information Commissioner’s Office is the UK’s independent authority set up to uphold information rights in the public interest, promoting openness by public bodies and data privacy for individuals.


Contact info

  • Water Lane, SK9, Wilmslow, United Kingdom

  • ico.org.uk

1.1

Bad

TrustScore 1 out of 5

500 reviews

5-star
4-star
3-star
2-star
1-star

How this company uses Trustpilot

See how their reviews and ratings are sourced, scored, and moderated.

Companies on Trustpilot aren't allowed to offer incentives or pay to hide reviews. Reviews are the opinions of individual users and not of Trustpilot. Read more

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

They don’t investigate complaints…

They don’t investigate complaints anymore thanks to the recent court ruling.

I made a data protection complaint
IC-287024-W9K2.
Clearly bullet pointing my complaints with evidence of concerns.

Only for the ICO to do nothing except request a sars which I had already done twice. Then closed the case.

What’s the point of this service if it no longer has to investigate complaints under law.

June 11, 2024
Unprompted review
Advertisement
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

ICO = WASTE, of time, money and purpose

I would be lucky to be able to list every failing this drain on Taxpayers money has.

In the last few months I have raised a complaint, and it more or less states on submission, thanks for raising a complaint but we will not take any action other than chat nicely to the party you are complaining about.

On enquiry I am told no action will be taken unless it is a "big" issue and that the ICO has no statutory powers to issue or enforce fines, as these would be challenged in the court and struck down.

They therefore have to rely on the goodwill of the people being investigated to accept a fine.

Try complaining online doesn't work. If you are unlucky enough to get to raise a case you are asked for information you cannot possibly have and they take several months to even acknowledge the issue being raised.

So to get this I raised a SAR with the organization I am complaining about who then failed to meet the deadline or the content or share in a way I could access.

Back to ICO well that's fine they can do that. I questioned whether in fact the choice of delivery was not to the benefit of the data subject; to which the roundabout answer was not exactly you have to state you cannot access it and suggest an alternate which the processor/ controller has to agree is secure.

But isn't the data the property of the subject? Hah maybe in the EU pal!

Ok so when a company registered and trading in the UK breached UK data laws but says that their responsibility to a data offices overseas ?

We would not get involved you need to address your complaint to the overseas data protection referred to by the organization making the alleged breach.

Back to the ICO to ask what action if any had been taken during this time, none wheat received the information you could not possibly get so we haven't done anything further.
Ok so why have you dropped the second organization in the complaint, oh they said that they had answered you and that they were happy that they had complied. (paraphrasing)

Honestly they are up there with BT as organizations that should just be ceased

May 30, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE

NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE
What is the point of this s completely useless organisation.
I have written to my MP to ask this question.
Even my GDPR Solicitor what deals with them daily called them useless and told me not you take anything they say or do as fact.

THEY ARE TAX PAYER FUNDED AND DO NOT EVEN BOTHER TO RESPOND TO TAX PAYERS ON HERE,
USELESS COMPLAIN to Your MP and link this page

May 11, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Fop of an organisation, completely useless

This is a toothless tiger. I would only recommend going through their processes so you can say to a solicitor you have ticked that useless box. It is a fop of an organisation with very little to offer any members of the public. Their track record on human rights and rights of the child is woefully inadequate. It is not fit for purpose yet public money is being spent to support something that is simply broken.

May 1, 2024
Unprompted review
Advertisement
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Worse than useless. Waste of tax-payers money that is unfit for purpose.

I had provided clear cut evidence an organisation held data on me from a third party. This organisation had lied and claimed they didn't. My case worker, Helen Scullion, asked the organisation if they had any. Unsurprisingly the organisation lied again, and despite a dated email supplied between them and another third party through a freedom of information request of that third party - referring to me, Helen - despite being provided with this evidence, decided this wasn't grounds to pursue further action, in direct contradiction of their policy stating "Where we have significant concerns about an organisation's ability to comply with the law, we can take regulatory action.", How blatantly lying about not possessing data, did not constitute "significant concerns about an organisations ability to comply with the law" is beyond me.

It also took two emails and a phone call for Helen to even bother explaining her botched reasoning, this after waiting nearly three months, and submitting pages worth of evidence for the ICO resulting in the ICO emailing the organisation, asking a question I'd already asked, and giving me a response I'd already been given.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Update, several months later I was fortunately able to win a court case against my employer due to the hardwork of a generous no-win/no-fee lawyer.

Had I not had this luck, my old employer would have financially crippled me. The ICO could easily identify wrong-doing and chose to sit by and let it happen. It's not just the fact they do nothing, it's that they waste so much of your time and energy before doing so.

May 8, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Is this yet another UK Government agency with a remit that is to pacify people into believing recourse exists when business abuse individuals personal information?

Human beings have a great capacity for wrongdoing. It’s an attribute that is unique in the world of life. We can and do make things worse, voluntarily, with full knowledge of what we are doing (as well as accidentally, and carelessly, and in a manner that is wilfully blind). – Jordan B. Peterson 2018

A UK Government agency that has been created to make people believe there are regulations for businesses to comply with.

The reality is that large companies know this to be a toothless wonder and is the reason getting a Data Subject Access Request is something businesses take little to no attention of.

The legal Director of Experian, has deliberately ignored my rights to access the data they hold about myself, especially the FALSE data that was supplied via ScottishPower along with any communications regarding to dealing with this matter! Experian’s Legal Department have continually shown a complete disregard for any of the rules & regulations set out by industry regulated framework along with UK Law & Legislation in particular the criminal offence committed under The Theft Act 1968 Section 17 False Accounting. This is compounded by the fact the criminal offence has been committed against The Executor of the Estate that holds a Grant Of Probate as issued by The High Court.

April 26, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Ico are aiding police forces and…

Ico are aiding police forces and buisness to cover up data to protect them.they are against the general public and designed to collect your evidence,then they aid the organisation in a cover up.deliberately created after Birmingham 6 fiasco and corruption.

April 19, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Toothless waste of space

ALways demanding money off me for my CCTV system but never does anything to stop all the spam calls, texts and emails. Online portal is impossible to use, keeps rejecting the complaint forms and even the complaint form for an issue with the ICO will not send.

April 18, 2024
Unprompted review
Advertisement
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

I wanted to complain about HP policy of…

I wanted to complain about HP policy of forcing users to access the printers they have bought only via HP cloud services thereby gathering unnecessary user data and exposure to security risks. But you have to jump through so many hoops you just give up. It's obvious the public should be protected from this harvesting but the ico offers no resistance to global companies.

April 10, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

(I)n(CO)mpetent Imbeciles!!!

Heidi Moore, "Lead" case officer, has not upheld my complaint regarding non-conformity regarding a subject access request to my GP SURGERY. As a highly experienced former police detective I submitted a wealth of corroborative documentary evidence as proof of such.
I wonder what training or experience Ms. Moore has? Fair does, only took 3 months to receive a reply. Absolute joke organisation.

April 5, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

A national disgrace

A national disgrace. The worst reviewed body in uk? Naturally they never respond here. Arrogant ,abusive lazy staff who seem to think they exist just to be paid (very well!) but not actually do anything.

If they were just incompetent and useless then ..well same as many public bodies . BUT they are worse. . ...they appear to me to actively obstruct complaints and conspire with large companies and public bodies to avoid GDPR compliance.

Most of the staff work at home and are unqualified. Astonishingly average..average!..salary is more than twice uk average. They also appear to be have very prejudiced employment practices...probably best not to apply if you are a white male.

April 2, 2024
Unprompted review
Advertisement
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

ICO - Not fit for purpose.

Similar to the last reviewer's experience, Ms Flanagan & her cohorts display a lack of knowledge of the legislation they are supposed to represent. Ask for a review and it gets reviewed by another person at the same level of experience, i.e, not much. It's worth noting that we can complain about the ICO to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman, but out of nearly 900 complaints about the ICO to them, how many have been successful? None. Not a single one. So this organisation exists as a non-accountable bunch of clueless admin clerks who have no interest in actually investigating any data breaches. Do yourselves a favour and don't even bother with these incompetent fools.

February 1, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 2 out of 5 stars

ICO; dismissed evidence, ignored its own guidance & lost Tribunal case

ICO reprimanded the organisation for a breach of regulation (delay in responding). Although correct, that was not my complaint. So, I have given them two stars for that initiative.

I appealed to Tribunal about an ICO decision* that wrongly upheld a Freedom of Information Request denial. ICO asked the Tribunal to strike out the appeal, on the basis that it had no reasonable prospect of success. The case was not struck out. The Tribunal found that ICO neglected to follow its own guidance. Consequently, ICO failed to balance and explain reasoning regarding public interest versus the rights of the data subject (para20). The Tribunal also found ICO was “inappropriately dismissive” of the evidence presented (para21). The Tribunal overruled ICO’s decision** and the organisation provided the information accordingly.

Holders of public office should act solely in the public interest, be objective, accountable, open, honest and show leadership by actively promoting and robustly supporting the Seven Principles of Public Life*** and challenge poor behaviour wherever it occurs. The ICO is incompetent or worse.

It will be appreciated if ICO respond via Trustpilot to this review.

*Google case ref ‘IC-190532-H2H8’ for details.
**Google ‘find case law national archives’ – then on national archives webpage search for ‘UKFTT 843’.
*** House of Commons usefully endorse and explain the ‘Seven Principles of Public Life’

October 10, 2023
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

ICO don't follow the law and couldn't care less.

The ICO are as bent as they come. They publish reams of information such as qualified and absolute exemptions and yet, when they are asked to produce the evidence of such, no reply. They also tend to find in favour against the complainant and as such, along with Ombudsmen services, it is a pointless waste of time applying to any of these people. They just don't do what they are supposed to and in my case were able to invoke a Tribunal rule to have my case struck out.

So much for s149 EQA 2010 and the advancement of equality matters for those who are allegedly given some sort of protection if those persons have "protected characteristics".

The ICO is an absolute disgrace and the PHSO just keep establishment principles in order.

If you are disabled and trying to find out why car insurance premiums have shot up, s43(2) FOIA allows for commercial interests to be withheld. This is a qualified exemption subject to the public interest test and qualified exemption test. Did the ICO do either? Did my insurer do either? Did the ICO & my insurer have a EQA 2010 policy in place to deal with how they treat those with protected characteristics? The answer, after an FOIA request to the ICO was replied, is no.

I have no faith in the law. Just look at the clowns and ignorant people who make law in this country. None of the Ministers in place know anything about their portfolios. The result is this system which is stacked against individuals in this country.

Pay up and shut up is what companies want and the government and establishment will support that. This includes Tribunals, the legal system and courts which are not independent of government as they like to pretend. In the case of the GRC Tribunal where all ICO disputes end, they are told by Parliament what they can and cannot do...That's independence for you.

March 5, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Totally Corrupted

I made a FOI request through the NHS, for which was denied me access to public information held by the NHS, therefore, my complaint was forwarded to the ICO that refused to take any action…UK is a completely corrupted system, the ICO try to cover misconduct and abuse from other gov bodies…ENTIRELY DISGUSTING!!!

February 26, 2024
Unprompted review
Advertisement
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

I had a clear data protection breach…

I had a clear data protection breach which was rejected and closed even after I called then and said there was inaccurate information they were told from the company. Not surprised there isn’t any good reviews of them on here. Do yourself a favour and just take your case to a solicitor to deal with it!

February 23, 2024
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

in 20 yrs they have never invsetigated…

in 20 yrs they have never invsetigated agodamn thing I have referred even in teh face of blatant breaches due to being blacklisted due to their racial prejudice.
NHS refused to correct my basic personal details, address, name etc and said it was a medical record, this is SWAST inBristol and the ICO said it is a breach of GDPR as they have a duty to recitfy immediately. they all protect each other. yet they get paid salaries to do a job but the truth is data protection does not exist. thera is no such thing. they have said they have not finalised yet it has been over a year,

February 16, 2024
Unprompted review

Is this your company?

Claim your profile to access Trustpilot’s free business tools and connect with customers.

Get free account

The Trustpilot Experience

Anyone can write a Trustpilot review. People who write reviews have ownership to edit or delete them at any time, and they’ll be displayed as long as an account is active.

Companies can ask for reviews via automatic invitations. Labeled Verified, they’re about genuine experiences.

Learn more about other kinds of reviews.

We use dedicated people and clever technology to safeguard our platform. Find out how we combat fake reviews.

Learn about Trustpilot’s review process.

Here are 8 tips for writing great reviews.

Verification can help ensure real people are writing the reviews you read on Trustpilot.

Offering incentives for reviews or asking for them selectively can bias the TrustScore, which goes against our guidelines.

Take a closer look