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The General Data Protection Regulation (EU 2016/679) came into force on 25 May 2018 adding new elements and significant enhancements to the existing data protection regime.
The Data Protection Act (DPA) 2018, which came into force on 23 May 2018, implemented the GDPR, whilst also adding provision for UK law to extend the GDPR to areas such as the security services and government bodies, which were not covered under the GDPR alone.
Post-Brexit (following the end of the Brexit transition period from 1 January 2021 onwards), the UK GDPR is the retained version of the EU Regulation by virtue of section 3 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Action 2018 and as amended by the Data Protection, Privacy and Electronic Communications (Amendment Etc) (EU Exit) Regulations 2020.
The UK GDPR protects the rights of UK citizens with regard to their data, the EU GDPR protects the rights of EU citizens. For organisations that handle data on both UK and EU citizens both GDPRs apply.
The principles and requirements of the EU GDPR continue to apply in the UK with its post-Brexit version and here we look at the major areas of scope and some definitions.
The GDPR applies to both controllers and processors of data. Controllers say how and why personal data is processed. The processor acts on the controller’s behalf to process the data. Your organisation may be a data processor, or a data controller, or both.
There are specific legal obligations on both controllers and processors:
Please see our related factsheet ‘Data Security - General Data Protection Regulation - Ensuring Compliance’ for more detailed information on the documentation requirements.
Personal data shall be:
Individuals have the right to know how their personal data is going to be processed. The GDPR promotes transparency over processing by way of a privacy notice encompassing (amongst other things) details of the controller, the source of the data, recipients of the data, data transfers made outside the EU, and the retention period of the data.
Individuals have the right to obtain confirmation that their data is being processed, access to their personal data, and other information, such as that provided in a privacy notice.
The maximum amount of time allowed to deal with a subject access request is 30 days and the right to charge a subject access fee has been removed, unless the request is unfounded, excessive or repetitive.
Individuals have the right to have inaccurate or incomplete personal data rectified. This must also include personal data which is shared or given to third parties.
Individuals have the right to request the deletion or removal of personal data where there is no compelling reason for its continued processing. Again, this must also include personal data that is shared or given to third parties.
It is important to note that there are extra requirements when the request relates to a child.
There are some exceptions to the right to erasure, such as where data is held to comply with a legal obligation.
Individuals have the right to restrict the processing of personal data. In these circumstances the personal data can be stored, but not processed.
Individuals have the right to obtain and reuse their personal data across different services. It allows them to move, copy or transfer personal data. Personal data must be provided in a structured machine-readable format (such as .csv).
Individuals have the right to object to the processing of personal data. Processing must stop immediately unless there are ‘compelling’ legitimate grounds for the processing, or if processing is for the establishment, exercise or defence of legal claims.
Individuals have the right to ensure that safeguards are in place to protect against the risk of damaging decisions being taken without human intervention. This also extends to the safeguarding of personal data used for profiling purposes.
The principle of accountability requires that appropriate governance measures are in place to document compliance. Organisations therefore need to:
Please see our related factsheet ‘Data Security - Ensuring Data Protection Compliance’ for more detailed information.
It is important to understand and document the lawful basis of your processing. There are six:
On the issue of consent, it must be specific, unambiguous and freely given. Positive consent cannot be assumed from inaction, such as failing to click an online ‘unsubscribe’ box, or from the use of pre-ticked boxes. Businesses need to make sure that they capture the date, time, method and the actual wording used to gain consent, so it is important to ensure that your business has the means to record and document such information.
Legitimate interest will grant you the ability to process the individuals’ data but only within the bounds that they would expect. If you are to rely on legitimate interests, you will take on the responsibility for ensuring that:
ICO legitimate interests guidance
A personal data breach is the accidental or unlawful destruction, loss, alteration, unauthorised disclosure or access to personal data.
The UK Regulator the ICO has an online self-assessment tool which helps to determine the severity of the breach and whether or not it need be reported. Some breaches need to be notified to the relevant supervisory authority within 72 hours. It is vital to undertake the assessment as soon as the breach is discovered.
ICO personal data breach assessment guidance
On 28 June 2021 the EU Commission adopted an adequacy decision for the UK which means that most data can continue to flow between the UK and the EU EEA without the need for additional safeguards. (The exception is data for the purposes of immigration control.)
When transferring data to a ‘third country’, then additional safeguards such as Standard Contractual Clauses or Binding Corporate rules may be applicable. The first link below is from the UK’s regulator – the ICO. The second is from the European Commission.
ICO data transfer agreement guidance
EU rules for transfers outside of the bloc
ICO home page for organisations
EU GDPR portal - http://www.eugdpr.org/