Hardly a day goes by without news of some consumer privacy breach in either the physical or digital realm. While a significant percentage of these events are the direct result of attacks from bad actors, there are other problems related to how companies are managing the data associated with consumers today.
On May 25, 2018, however, any company in the European Union (EU) that is not in compliance with the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is at risk of a fine of up to 20 million euros (or 4 percent of their company's global topline revenue). If that does not catch the attention of the C-suite, and encourage them to begin taking data privacy more seriously, it is likely that nothing ever will.
The problem according to an IDC Research survey conducted on behalf of ESET, however, is that 25 percent of companies admitted they were not even aware of the regulations and more than half were unsure of the potential impact. What is perhaps even worse is that 20 percent have not begun preparing for GDPR at all and 60 percent were still getting their systems in line with the new rules.
For millions of digital enterprises in the EU now is the time to ensure they are in compliance, but every digital enterprise, regardless of location, should consider adopting more rigorous protocols when it comes to managing and processing customer data.
GDPR Gives Consumers Control
Unlike initiatives such as the CAN-SPAM Act or Do Not Call registries, the intent of which are to provide consumers with some protection from overly aggressive businesses and marketers, the aim of the GDPR is to provide consumers with a greater amount of control over how their data is being protected and what can be done with it.
The EU's intent with the GDPR is to give consumers more control over how their personal data (from name and email address to other online identifiers such as IP address or other economic, cultural or health data points) is used. As most Web professionals are likely aware, companies routinely swap access to personal data for use of their services; the GDPR is essentially just seeking to address how that data is protected, processed and managed.
The threat of not abiding by these new rules is significant, but adhering to them does not always require dramatic shifts in business operations (only subtle ones). And ultimately, they are likely good business practices anyway.
The Business Impact
Those who should be most concerned with the GDPR are what are known as controllers and processors.
A processor is the one doing the processing of data (for example, a provider of social login services) while the controller is the one stating how and why personal data is being processed. Essentially, any organization can be a controller (including for profit companies, government entities, even non-profit associations). As long as you're dealing with data belonging to EU residents, even those companies located within the US or elsewhere, it is their responsibility to ensure the processor abide by the data protection law.
Even if controllers and processors are based outside the EU, the GDPR will still apply to them so long as they're dealing with data belonging to EU residents. It's the controller's responsibility to ensure their processor abides by data protection law and processors must themselves abide by rules to maintain records of their processing activities.
Once the legislation comes into effect, controllers must ensure personal data is processed lawfully, transparently, and for a specific purpose. Once that purpose is fulfilled and the data is no longer required, it should be deleted.
The Road to Compliance
Compliance will ultimately rest in great part in how consent is obtained from the consumer.
The GDPR requires consent be an active, affirmative action by the data subject rather than a passive acceptance under existing models like pre-checked boxes. Controllers will need to keep a record of how and when an individual gave their consent and those consumers will need to be able to withdraw their consent when they want. Consumers will also be able to ask for access at "reasonable intervals" according to the GDPR, and controllers will need to respond within one month.
The GDPR also requires that controllers and processors must be transparent about how they collect data, what they do with it, and how they process it, and must be clear (using plain language) in their explanations. What this means is that consumers now have the right to access any information a company holds on them, and the right to know why that data is being processed, how long it's stored for, and who gets to see it. Where possible, data controllers should provide secure, direct access for people to review what information a controller stores about them. Fortunately, most experience management/content management systems currently provide some method to do so.
Individuals also have the right to demand that their data is deleted if it's no longer necessary to the purpose for which it was collected. This is known as the 'right to be forgotten'. Under this rule, they can also demand that their data is erased if they've withdrawn their consent for their data to be collected, or object to the way it is being processed. The controller is responsible for telling other organizations (for instance, Google) to delete any links to copies of that data, as well as the copies themselves.
Controllers must now store people's information in commonly used formats (like CSV files), so that they can move a person's data to another organization (free of charge) if the person requests it. Controllers must do this within one month.
In the Event of A Breach
Even with the best intention, bad things can still happen.
If companies suffer a data breach that puts individuals at risk, it is the responsibility of the company to notify a data protection authority (e.g. the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) in the UK) within 72 hours of the organization becoming aware of it.
While it may not be possible to detail every aspect of a breach upon discovering it, enterprises should notify the data protection authority of the nature of the data that has been breached, and the approximate number of people affected, as well as detail the potential consequences for those people and what measures have been taken or those which the company plans to take in the near future.
Companies should also notify the people affected by the breach, even before informing the data protection authority. If the 72-hour deadline is not met, companies are at risk of being saddled with significant fines (up to $10 million, or 2% of the global annual turnover, whichever is greater).
One Year to Go
If yours is an enterprise that puts its customers and those customers' security first, the GDPR won't require dramatic shifts in data management. Those with only loose rules regarding how personal information is controlled and processed however will need to rethink their approach, and quickly, or risk not only audience distrust but significant business losses as well. Make the right choice and start making data security a priority in your enterprise starting today.