The GDPR came into force on the 25th May, 2018. From that point onwards, any organisation around the world processing data relating to European citizens had to comply with the new data security laws
Information from the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) report published in February 2019
Total fines issued:
€55,955,871
Number of Data Breaches reported by a data controller:
64,684
Individual complaints received:
94,622
Full report: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/meetdocs/2014_2019/plmrep/COMMITTEES/LIBE/DV/2019/02-25/9_EDPB_report_EN.pdf
Many tech giants set their European headquarters in the Republic of Ireland. Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Twitter, Dropbox and many more fell under the GDPR as applied in Ireland.
The Irish Data Protection Commission said that in the first year of GDPR, the subject of most data investigations involved the tech giants, with Facebook and it’s brands Instagram and WhatsApp being the most investigated.
Google has already received a £44,000,000 fine from the French data regulator CNIL for it’s handling of personal data in targeted advertising, it is also facing another investigation from the Irish DPC for similar offences.
The tech giants, along with everyone else, had two years notice of the new regulations, but it appears many of them chose to make the minimal effort to adjust to the regulations.
In the USA, individuals have less robust data protection and privacy laws, and its thought that many global companies set the USA standards as the defacto standard. European GDPR sets the bar much higher and gives individuals much more control over the use of their data.
Data taken from the ICO enforcement page May 25th 2018 – 12 February 2019
ICO Fines issued:
34 (£3,335,000)
ICO Actions Taken:
59
ICO Prosecutions against individuals:
9
Penalties issued to data controllers who have not registered: 103 |
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PECR Nuisance calls & messages reported: 51,314 | …of those:
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PECR Spam text messages 13,623 | ..of those:
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PECR Automated calls: 13,623 | …of those:
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Number of complaints about the use of cookies:
949
Some of these fines were a result of complaints made under the Data Protection Act 1998 before the GDPR came into force. The powers available to the ICO and the level of fines that could be issued were significantly lower under the old DPA.
https://ico.org.uk/action-weve-taken/
The ICO is responsible for GDPR Compliance in the UK. If an organisation poresses personal data it is required to be registered with the ICO and to comply with the GDPR, regardless of size.
The ICO have stated that they are looking for organisations to develop on their compliance to include data security by default. This means that any changes or new functions within the organisation will include GDPR as part of the process.
Polish Data Protection Officer fines polish company €220,000 for processing the personal information of people without making them aware of the processing.
https://edpb.europa.eu/news/national-news/2019/first-fine-imposed-president-personal-data-protection-office_en
DPO’s are a requirement for some organisations, and recommended for other smaller organisations. Organisations can make user of external third party DPO’s to help keep costs down and to being in the required experience.
Over 500,000 organisations registered DPO’s across Europe since the introduction of the GDPR
Data taken from JAPP May 2019
Estimated DPO’s:
500,000
Documented DPO’s: 375,000 |
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Number of cases received by DPOs:
280,000
https://iapp.org/resources/article/gdpr-one-year-anniversary-infographic/
Personally Identifiable Data is any information that can be used to identify an individual. Obvious data like someone’s name or customer reference number, and less obvious data like a photo, customer number or CCTV image.
The Data Subject is the individual that the personally identifiable data relates to.
Some information falls under ‘special category data’ this information has extra precautions on it, such as needing explicit consent for processing it.
Special Category Data includes health, ethnic, religious, biometric and sexual information.
How data is processed is the core of the GDPR. Processing data means any operation performed on data, such as collecting, storing, recording, organising, retrieval, transmission and so on. The data can be digital, paper based or in any other organised structure.
If you’re collecting information, you need to give the data subject sufficient information about why you’re collecting the information, what you’re going to use it for and how long you’re hold onto it.
If you plan to use the data for a number of reasons (such as for sending marketing information and for processing an order) you need to give the data subject the option to select each use individually.
If you’ve acquired the data not directly from the data subject, you have a limited time to alert the data subject of how and why you received their data, where it came from, how you plan to use it and to give the data subject information on their rights.
If you’re processing special category data, you need to get explicit consent from the data subject before processing.
Consent is only one of a number of lawful basis for processing personally identifiable information. The GDPR give a number of alternatives that might be more appropriate for your situation.
As a Data Subject, you have the following rights to manage how your personally identifiable data is used:
GDPR Prevents data sharing
This is not true, the GDPR does put security and precautions on how data can be shared, such as the type of data that can be shared, the reason for sharing, who it can be shared with and how the data subject needs to be notified. As long as the reason for sharing data is legal and legitimate and the data subject has been made aware of the share, and given the option to not have their data shared, it is fine to share the information.
American tech giants will ignore the GDPR
A lot of tech giants have their European headquarters in Ireland, the Irish DPA responsible for enforcing GDPR in Ireland is already investigating some of the big global names like Facebook and Apple. The French DPA have already issued a massive £44,000,000 fine against Google over it’s lack of transparency.
California have since released it’s own version of the GDPR, it’s the USA’s most comprehensive data protection laws, and it’s got a lot of support, there have already been calls for a GDPR like US-wide federal law protecting personally identifiable information.
Consent is required for everything
While Consent is a lawful basis for processing information, it’s not the only one. GDPR gives organisations several basis for processing personally identifiable information. You should make sure you’re using the right basis for your processing as ti can affect the rights that users have to their information.
You can’t use marketing emails
Under the GDPR, you need to make data subjects aware how you’re going to process their information. As long as the user chooses (opts IN) to receive marketing information, it’s perfectly fine to use their information in that way.
We don’t use computers, GDPR is only about digital information
The GDPR applies irrespective of the type of filing system you use. If you’re processing information that the GDPR covers, you need to be registered and compliant with the GDPR.
Caldicott Report on the handling of medical information.
https://www.igt.hscic.gov.uk/Caldicott2Principles.aspx?tk=436113758099715&lnv=18&cb=3dc43b21-7fd7-4897-af04-0c027c7dd4a3
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