Millennials are less concerned with privacy than older generations, ICO’s Annual Track 2016 finds

  On April 2016, the Information Commissioner’s Officer (ICO) issued the Annual Track 2016, a research that assesses the level of awareness of UK population of its information/privacy rights. According to the document, the most important social issue for UK citizens is health care. Only 15% is concerned with protection of personal information. And the younger generations seem […]

Data Protection Authority comments on Brexit

On June 24, 2016, the British Information Commissioner Officer (ICO), issued a press release in consideration of the recent referendum results. “The Data Protection Act remains the law of the land irrespective of the referendum result. If the UK is not part of the EU, then upcoming EU reforms to data protection law would not […]

French DPA (CNIL) launches consultation to help prepare for the GDPR

On June 16, 2016, the French data protection agency (CNIL) opened a consultation on the EU Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The consultation aims at helping the Article 29 Working Party with the guidelines that it is preparing on Data Protection Officers, data portability, Privacy Impact Assessment, and certification. The purpose is to collect concrete questions, […]

Barristers publish non-partisan, fact-based report on EU membership (consequence of Brexit on data protection is discussed)

The report consists of three papers and one executive summary. The Report spells our the “the legal impacts of withdrawal” in the Executive summary and in paper I. The Report also discusses the consequences of Brexit on data protection: We consider, were the UK to remain in the EU, that the new General Data Protection […]

Privacy Shield not robust enough to withstand ECJ’s future legal scrutiny, European Data Protection Supervisor opines

  On May 30, 2016, the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) – whose mission is to advise the EU institutions on the data protection implications of their policies — published Opinion 4/2016 on the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield draft adequacy decision. According to the press release the Privacy Shield as it stands is not robust enough to withstand future […]

Christopher Kuner, Reality and Illusion in EU Data Transfer Regulation Post Schrems

Interesting article discussing international data transfer between Europe and the U.S. Abstract:  “In Schrems v. Data Protection Commissioner, the Court of Justice of the European Union invalidated the EU-US Safe Harbour arrangement allowing personal data to be transferred to the US. The judgment affirms the fundamental right to data protection, defines an adequate level of […]

Implementing EU Digital Single Market agenda through new ecommerce rules

On May 25, 2016, the EU Commission proposed new legislation to “allow consumers and companies to buy and sell products and services online more easily and confidently across the EU”. As a way to implement a Digital Single Market, the EU Commission plans to boost e-commerce by: “Tackling geoblocking” –  The proposed legislation shall ensure that consumers seeking […]

Facebook’s transfer of data to the U.S. may end up in front of the ECJ again

On May 25, 2016, Schrem’s website “Europe v Facebook” (website collecting information regarding class actions against Facebook) released a press update according to which the Irish Data Protection Commissioner may refer another issue to the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) i.e., according to the website, whether “Facebook can continue to transfer data from the […]

Google appealed French DPA’s sanction for failing to “forget” – A thought on Google’s “extraterritorial” argument

On March 28, 2016 the French DPA (CNIL) imposed a fine of EUR 100,000 on Google for inadequate implementation of the “right to be forgotten” – Google is appealing it. The appeal should take two years. The sanction was imposed for failing to comply with users’ requests to have links to personal information about them […]