The GDPR went into effect last week. We all got a billion emails with people surprisingly updating their privacy policies. Many spread FUD. Even more spread cute memes. So that was fun. Some panicked. We hope you didn’t. Did you block all EU traffic like some US news sites? (Blocking European IPs does not get you off the hook. Maybe a better approach is simply to have some respect to people’s privacy?). Did you try to force consent like Google and Facebook are accused of doing? If you’ve been following our GDPR guide series, you’re doing much better than most. With two more topics to cover, the journey isn’t over yet so let’s get started on this post’s topic: transferring personal data internationally. If your organization is based in the European Economic Area (EEA), there may be times that you want to transfer your data to a third country i.e. all countries who are not in the European Union or an EEA member state. In that case you can only do so under specific conditions, which we’ll explore each one in more detail below:Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://developer.upsun.com/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
- Transfers on the basis of an adequacy
- Transfers subject to appropriate safeguards
- Binding corporate rules
- The individual gave consent, after being informed of the risk. Remember the bigger the risk the clearer the consent must be. If you are planning on sharing biometric information with a company from Latveria, you better be sure about the level of consent that was given something in the lines of “I understand my DNA will be used by a swarm of autonomous drones with a heavy accent to hunt me down and kill me.”
- The transfer is necessary to fulfill the contract between the individual and the company. Again, this is about privacy by design and default. You can only send those information items that are necessary what the EU calls “data quality and proportionality”.
- It is necessary for the contract in the interest of the data subject. So if a person has or wants to enter into a contract with you, this covers not only clients, but also price quotes, RFQs, and such.
- If it is for public interest. Basically, anything that is mandated by an EU member state law, or done within the administrative authority of an EU government.
- It is necessary to establish, exercise or defend legal claims. Try not to get sued, it is never fun, but if you are, and you need to present evidence, and that concerns third party personal information … good news, you can.
- It is necessary to protect the vital interest of someone. Basically, in life and death situations, don’t wait for consent. The regulator is not evil.
- The Rule of law
- Respect for human rights and freedoms
- Relevant legislation, both general and sectoral concerning public security, defence, national security and criminal law
- The existence and effective functioning of one or more independent supervisory authorities in the third country or to which an international organization is subject
- Legally binding and enforceable instrument between public authorities or bodies - this means laws and regulations some other country put into place to make sure that it is going to be OK to transfer data to them. This is important, it means some countries won’t get a blanket OK from the Commission, but in certain circumstances you will be covered. Imagine a law in, let’s say Latveria, that specifically addresses call center operators and adds sufficient guarantees. In that case you will be OK with a call center, but you will be required to provide more safeguards for another industry.
- Binding corporate rules - this is not a magical get out-of-prison card, there are strong constraints on what these may be, and how they are formulated. This was designed first and foremost for larger multinational organizations, so they can continue to operate. These are very strict codes of conduct, and they must be approved by the regulator. Basically, if you don’t have an army of lawyers, this is not the thing that is going to help you.
- Standard data protection clauses adopted by the European Commission - This is a magical get-out-of-prison card. These are contracts written by nice people at the Commission so you don’t need to have an army of lawyers and still operate with companies outside the EU.
- Standard data protection clauses adopted by a supervisory authority and approved by the Commission - this is the same as above, but at the country level, not the EU level.
- An approved code of conduct - This is basically the same thing as the “Binding Corporate Rules” but you don’t use an army of lawyers and decide to adhere to someone else’s proposed (and approved by the commission) code of conduct. This is not magical, the COC itself needs to cover all the bases and your adherence should be something you can show. Lip service is not enough.
- An approved certification mechanism that comes together with commitments of third country organizations to apply the appropriate safeguards including respect for data subject rights - For the moment there are none. You can be “compliant” with the GDPR but you can’t be certified, because there are no approved certification mechanisms. But this will come. People will make a lot of money out of this. There are people selling those already, and these can be useful as they would show how much you care (which the Regulator does take under the new rules into consideration). But this is not yet magical.
- Contractual clauses between the controller/processor and the controller/processor/recipient in the third country or international organizational - If you can’t get blanket safeguards, you may still transfer data internationally by putting in place specific safeguards for the specific action you are trying to accomplish.