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“Grant me the serenity to accept the data I cannot process, courage to change the treatment of the data I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” - Every data controller within the EEA right about now
Get Educated
It is important that key personnel in the organisation are aware that the law is changing to the GDPR. They should identify areas that could cause compliance problems under the GDPR. Initially, data controllers should review and enhance their organisation...
“Grant me the serenity to accept the data I cannot process, courage to change the treatment of the data I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” - Every data controller within the EEA right about now
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Get Educated
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Check Yourself
- Why are you holding it?
- How did you obtain it?
- Why was it originally gathered?
- How long will you retain it?
- How secure is it, both in terms of encryption and accessibility?
- Do you ever share it with third parties and on what basis might you do so?
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Communicate
- the legal basis for processing the data;
- retention periods;
- the right of complaint where customers are unhappy with your implementation of any of these criteria;
- whether their data will be subject to automated decision making;
- and their individual rights under the GDPR. The GDPR also requires that the information be provided in concise, easy to understand and clear language.
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Personal Privacy Rights
- subject access
- to have inaccuracies corrected
- to have information erased
- to object to direct marketing
- to restrict the processing of their information, including automated decision-making
- data portability
- How long will it take to locate (and correct or delete) the data from all locations where it is stored?
- Who will make the decisions about deletion?
- Can your systems respond to the data portability provision of the GDPR, if applicable where you have to provide the data electronically and in a commonly used format?
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How will Data Subject Requests change?
- In most cases, you will not be able to charge for processing an access request, unless you can demonstrate that the cost will be excessive.
- The timescale for processing an access request will also shorten, dropping significantly from the current 40 day period to one month.
- Organisations will have some grounds for refusing to grant an access request. Where a request is deemed manifestly unfounded or excessive, it can be refused. However, organisations will need to have clear refusal policies and procedures in place, and demonstrate why the request meets these criteria.
- You will also need to provide some additional information to people making requests, such as your data retention periods and the right to have inaccurate data corrected.
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What we talk about when we talk about a ‘Legal Basis’
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Using customer consent as a grounds to process data
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Processing Children’s Data
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Data Protection Impact Assessments (DPIA) and Data Protection by design and default
- Who will do it?
- Who else needs to be involved?
- Will the process be run centrally or locally?
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Reporting data breaches – how to make it right when it’s gone wrong
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Data Protection Officers
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Cross-border processing and the controversial one stop shop