The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has issued guidance to help companies transfer data to the United States and other third countries safely after Europe’s top court in July ruled key methods used up until then were either invalid or unsafe.
The Court of Justice of the European Union, in addition to scrapping the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield, determined two other principal mechanisms for data transfers—standard contractual clauses (SCCs) and binding corporate rules (BCRs)—remain valid but warned neither offer 100 percent legal protection. As such, in the four months since the judgment, companies have been anxious that they may be in breach of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) by continuing to transfer data across the Atlantic.
On Wednesday, the EDPB published its list of “supplementary measures” companies can take to ensure the personal data they transfer outside of the European Union still enjoys the same level of protection data subjects would expect in Europe.
“The protection granted to personal data in the European Economic Area must travel with the data wherever it goes,” the EDPB said. “In the end data exporters are responsible for making the concrete assessment in the context of the transfer, the third country law and the transfer tool they are relying on.”
“Privacy advocacy organizations and regulators alike are pushing hard for companies to get into line with privacy laws, and enforcement action is likely to increase as guidance makes clear what is required.”
Gary LaFever, CEO and General Counsel, Anonos
The EDPB’s six-step guide says companies should:
According to the EDPB’s guidance, supplementary measures include:
Scenarios in which the EDPB says there are no effective supplementary measures include:
Experts say the EDPB’s guidance is useful, though some companies will find it onerous to comply. They also warn companies should take steps to implement the measures quickly.
Gary LaFever, CEO and general counsel at data privacy specialist Anonos, says there is a “high” chance of regulators and privacy groups taking enforcement action against companies that are not already implementing the steps the EDPB is recommending. “Privacy advocacy organizations and regulators alike are pushing hard for companies to get into line with privacy laws, and enforcement action is likely to increase as guidance makes clear what is required,” he says.
“If an organization has not completed the steps and suffers a notifiable breach related to an EU-U.S. transfer, they will find any subsequent regulator investigation much more uncomfortable,” agrees Camilla Winlo, director of consultancy at privacy expert DQM GRC. “A fine is more likely and will be bigger if the organization has not complied with the EDPB’s requirements.”
This article originally appeared in COMPLIANCE WEEK. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All rights reserved by the respective owners.
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