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Ulster Historical Foundation is an educational non-profit and registered charity (registration no. NIC100280) based in Bradley Thallon House, Unit 44D, Kiltonga Estate, Belfast Road, Newtownards, BT23 4TJ
The Foundation is registered with the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), Reg. No. Z7585371.
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Ulster Historical Foundation is committed to ensuring that your privacy is protected. Where we ask you to provide certain information by which you can be identified when using our website, then you can be assured that it will only be used in accordance with this privacy policy.
Ulster Historical Foundation is the ‘data controller’ and if we hold personal data about you, in the language of GDPR you are the ‘data subject’.
Our privacy policy is designed to be in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). This policy explains how we will use the personal data that we hold.
We might need to change this privacy notice from time to time. If we do, we will let you know.
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In order to provide our services, we may need to process personal data from time to time (that is information about someone who can be identified from the data). This personal data may be about you or other people.
Personal data is ‘any information relating to an identified or identifiable living person’. The data held by the Foundation falls into three main categories:
Historical data pertaining to deceased individuals and drawn from various sources including public records, church records, census material, etc.;
Current/contemporary data pertaining to individuals (usually members and clients) which has been provided by them in commissioning the Foundation to deliver specific services; and
Financial and administrative data required to enable the Foundation to function.
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Personal or sensitive data including: name, address, DOB, email address and telephone number;
In some circumstances financial data supplied directly to us by clients, such as credit card[1] information or personal cheques (which might give personal details); and
Preferences and interests (for example if you are interested in publications, online records, membership, events, etc).
Note: personal data collected does include individuals not resident within the EU.
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It is possible that some of the information which we collect and store about clients/customers may include some data which falls within the Special Categories of personal data.[2]
For example, in some instances clients who have commissioned genealogical research may provide the Foundation with personal data on living relatives e.g., siblings, parents, relatives, in order for our research team to deliver the service which they have commissioned us to undertake.
UHF rarely asks for this, rather it may be furnished by the client as part of a wider family tree. If a living relative is the subject of the commissioned research, we do not contact such living relatives but we can provide information that is held in the public domain.
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We may also collect, use and share Aggregated Data such as statistical or demographic data which we collect. Aggregated Data may be derived from personal data but since it cannot be used to identify an individual, it is not personal data.
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- clients and customers who use our services
- members who have joined the Ulster Genealogical and Historical Guild to avail of the various services and benefits of membership of the ‘Guild’
- donors and those who have given financial or other support to us
- subscribers to our eNewsletter
- users of the Foundation’s website
- volunteers and supporters, and employees or prospective employees
- those who attend our functions, events, book launches, conferences and courses
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In most cases the information we hold about you has been provided directly to us by you. We collect personal data from you when you:
- commission research, purchase publications, buy credits to use to search our online historical records databases, register for a genealogy course or conference;
- contact us to join the Ulster Genealogical and Historical Guild;
- make a financial donation or in-kind gift to the Foundation;
- subscribe to our eNewsletter;
- contact us for advice or support;
- register to attend an event such as a lecture, book launch, course or conference; visit our website, create user accounts, and indicate your preferences;
- complete one of our surveys; and
- apply for a job with us, including if you send your cv to us on a speculative basis.
- In some cases we may collect data from someone else. Examples include where existing members or supporters feel you may be interested in using our services, attending or hosting one of our events, or supporting our work, and they suggest your name to us.
- We may also collect data from publicly available sources. Examples include information gathered from online media, including social media like Facebook or Twitter.
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The Foundation complies with our obligations under GDPR, by keeping personal data up-to-date, by storing and destroying it securely, by not collecting or retaining excessive amounts of data (other than historical data on deceased individuals for the purposes of undertaking its work), by protecting personal data from loss, misuse, unauthorised access and disclosure and by ensuring appropriate technical measures are in place to protect your personal data.
We use personal data to manage, deliver and promote our core charitable activities, these include:
- promote the aims and objectives of the Foundation through our range of activities;
- send communications to you about the Foundation;
- notify you about events, course, classes, book launches, new books and other historical and genealogical news, relevant to your expressed preferences;
- give information on special offers and new product alerts and account updates;
- provide you with help, advice and support;
- fundraise for the Foundation, including processing of Gift Aid declarations;
- publicise lecture tours, appearances at fairs, festivals and community educational classes;
- communicate with members and publish their research interests and personal data (where prior explicit consent has been given by them for their information to be placed in various public research publications); and
- inform members and pay-per-view users of new historical database releases or upgrades.
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We use the following lawful bases to process personal data:
- UHF processes data under Article 89 of the GDPR (Schedule 2 Part 6 UK Data Protection Bill) pertaining to historic records and information.
- Explicit consent of the data subject so that we can keep you informed about new products and services news, events and activities.
- Explicit consent of the data subject so we can process Gift Aid donations.
- Where processing is necessary for carrying out obligations under employment, social security or social protection law or other agreement.
- Where we have legal obligations under UK or EU law, such as fraud prevention, the exercise of consumer rights, and under equal opportunity responsibilities.
- Where it is in our legitimate interest to provide confirmations or updates about products or services we provide you with, such as fulfilling your request to attend events, participate in courses, or help you with advice and support.
- Where it is in our legitimate interest to provide our membership service by keeping members informed about their membership status, new products and services, activities, updates, including member newsletters.
- Where you have subscribed to receive our eNewsletter you will have given consent for us to store your contact information and to contact you by subscribing.
- You can unsubscribe at any time from the email itself or by contacting us.
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The Foundation will treat your personal data as strictly confidential and will never sell your data, nor do we rent or trade personal data with other organisations or businesses solely for the purposes of marketing or to make a profit. Information in respect of Guild members (if they have so authorised) may be sold (to cover production costs) in book form (The Directory of Irish Family History Research) to public libraries, etc. to enable greater circulation of potential research material.
We will not disclose personal data to any third party or external organisations, other than data processors carrying out work on our behalf.
We may pass on your personal data if we have a legal obligation to do so, or if we have to enforce or apply our Terms and Conditions of Use and other agreements. Otherwise it will only be shared with third parties with your explicit consent.
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GDPR provides you with the following rights:
- to be informed about the processing of your personal information;
- to have your personal information corrected if it is inaccurate and to have incomplete personal information completed;
- to object to processing of your personal information;
- to restrict processing of your personal information;
- to have your personal information erased (the ‘right to be forgotten’);
- to request access to your personal information and to obtain information about how we process it;
- to move, copy or transfer your personal information (‘data portability’); and
- to lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner’s Office.
- The Foundation is committed to upholding your rights. You can contact us for further clarification or any concerns you have regarding your personal data that we hold (see contact details below).