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A

Administrative Data

Administrative Data are data collected about people when they interact with public services. 


Aggregate

Aggregate Data are data combined from several measurements or individuals. When data are aggregated, groups of observations are replaced with summary statistics based on those observations.


Anonymised

The adjective "anonymised" is used to describe data that has undergone a process of manipulation—such as the removal of direct identifiers, aggregation, or suppression—to ensure it no longer relates to an identified or identifiable person. This means that truly anonymised data cannot be linked back to the original individual through any reasonable means. For this reason, anonymised data is no longer considered personal data and is no longer subject to data protections laws like the GDPR. 


C

Controller

As defined in Article 4 of the GDPR, a Controller is a natural or legal person, who is responsible for defining the purposes and means of data processing.
 


D

Data Breach

The Article 4 of the GDPR outlines that a Data Breach occurs where ‘there has been the accidental or unlawful destruction, loss, alteration, unauthorised disclosure of, or access to, personal data transmitted, stored or otherwise processed’. 


Data Subject

A Data Subject is the observation about whom the data relates. 

Usually a Data Subject is a natural person, but in the context of ASSURED, we expand this definition to refer to an observation that is represented by a single row in microdata. Under this definition, a Data Subject could also be a commercial entity, a group of people such as a family, a sensitive habitat, etc. 

To ensure the clarity and readability of the text, we tend to refer to the Data Subject as if they were a natural person (i.e. referring to Data Subjects as 'they') but it should be understood that the principles expressed also apply to other types of Data Subjects.   


I

Identifiable

When used in reference to data: identifiable data are all types of data or any piece of information that can be used to identify or reidentify an individual.

It can be also used in reference to a person. Particulary in legal texts, it appears in the following combination "identifiable natural person". From the legal perspective, an identifiable natural person is a living individual who can be identified, directly or indirectly, in particular by reference to an identifier such as a name, an identification number, location data, an online identifier or to one or more factors specific to the physical, physiological, genetic, mental, economic, cultural or social identity of that natural person. 


M

Microdata

Microdata refers to raw, unit-level data collected from individuals, households, or businesses via surveys, censuses, or administrative records. It contains detailed, unaggregated information about specific entities and is used to create custom tabulations, perform in-depth analysis, and generate statistics.


O

Output Checkers

Output Checkers assess outputs produced from sensitive data to ascertain if they can be considered 'Safe', because they are unlikely to lead to a disclosure that harms the Data Subjects, or not.

Many Trusted Research Environments require outputs to undergo a check before they are removed from the Safe Setting.


P

Persistent Identifier

A Global Persistent Identifier (PID) is a long-term digital reference to a resource. Unlike a standard web URL (which can break if a website moves), a PID is a permanent link that ensures your data remains findable forever.



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