159x Filetype PDF File size 3.14 MB Source: www.pwc.com
Contents Executive summary 2 Responding to the fear of technology – why data protection law exists 4 Transition to the GDPR – technology under heightened scrutiny 5 Technology failure and consequences for organisations 8 Technology capabilities required for GDPR compliance scenarios 10 Moving from theory to reality – understanding and utilising the consensus of professional opinion 14 What should organisations do now? 16 Executive summary The EU General Data Protection Technology is, in other words, the Regulation (GDPR) delivers a principal problem that data protection fundamental change in how data law is trying to solve. As such, it is controllers and data processors handle obvious that, as well as being the personal data. Instead of an ‘add-on’ or problem, technology must provide the afterthought within business solution. If entities are storing too operations, protections for personal data much personal data, for example, will now have to be designed into the technology needs to deliver delete, very fabric of data processing systems, erase, de-duplication and meaning that entities will need to minimisation functionality. re-examine how they approach the use However, the way that data protection of technology in their organisations. has operated in practice tells a different European data protection law has story and PwC’s experience in this area always been concerned with how backs this up: despite technology being technology operates. Indeed, the first both the problem and the solution, proposals for harmonised, pan- technology systems have not been European laws were a response to designed and deployed from the technological developments. Legal perspective of the requirements of data instruments such as Council of Europe protection law. This is why we see so Recommendation 509 on human rights much debate over the retention and and modern scientific and technological storage of personal data, so much developments (31 Jan. 1968) pinpointed confusion about the nature and with precision the risks to privacy that whereabouts of personal data and so were posed by the technology revolution many technology-related cyber-security of the 1960s. Data protection laws exist failures. From this perspective it might because it is believed that, without be said that the technology stack has them, technology will enable or cause been the missing link in data protection data controllers and processors to programmes over the years. trample on fundamental rights The underlying reasons for these issues and freedoms. will no doubt continue to be a source of debate, but one thing is certain: in the new world of the GDPR, where tougher and more penetrative forms of adverse scrutiny are likely, instances of technology failure will be harder to excuse. 2 | Technology’s role in data protection – the missing link in GDPR transformation | PwC
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.