ICO
INFORMATION
COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE (UK)
Preparing
for the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
12
steps to take now
1.
Awareness
You
should make sure that decision makers and key people in your
organisation are aware that the law is changing to the GDPR. They
need to appreciate the impact this is likely to have.
2.Information
you hold
You
should document what personal data you hold, where it came from and
who you may need to organise an information audit.
3.Communicating
privacy information
You
should review your current privacy notices and put a plan in place
for making any necessary changes in time for GDPR implementation.
4.
Individuals’ rights
You
should check your procedures to ensure they cover all the rights
individuals have, including how you would delete personal data or
provide data electronically and in a commonly used format
5.Subject
access requests
You
should update your procedures and plan how you will handle requests
within the new timescales and provide any additional information.
6.Lawful
basis for processing personal data
You
should identify the lawful basis for your processing activity in the
GDPR, document it and update your privacy notice to explain it.
7.Consent
You
should review how you seek, record and manage consent and whether you
need to make any changes. Refresh existing consents now if they don’t
meet the GDPR standard.
8.Children
You
should start thinking now about whether you need to put systems in
place to verify individuals’ ages and to obtain parental or
guardian consent for any data processing activity.
9.Data
breaches
You
should make sure you have the right procedures in place to detect,
report and investigate a personal data breach.
10.Data
Protection by Design and Data Protection Impact Assessments
You
should familiarise yourself now with the ICO’s code of practice on
Privacy Impact Assessments as well as the latest guidance from the
Article 29 Working Party, and work out how and when to implement them
in your organisation.
11.Data
Protection Officers
You
should designate someone to take responsibility for data protection
compliance and assess where this role will sit within your
organisation’s structure and governance arrangements. You should
consider whether you are required to formally designate a Data
Protection Officer.
12.International
If
your organisation operates in more than one EU member state (ie you
carry out cross-border processing), you should determine your lead
data protection supervisory authority. Article 29 Working Party
guidelines will help you do this.
Introduction
This
checklist highlights 12 steps you can take now to
prepare
for the General Data Protection Regulation
(GDPR)
which will apply from 25 May 2018.
Many
of the GDPR’s main concepts and principles are much the same as
those in the current Data Protection Act (DPA), so if you are
complying properly with the current law then most of your approach to
compliance will remain valid under the GDPR and can be the starting
point to build from. However, there are new elements and significant
enhancements, so you will have to do some things for the first time
and some things
differently.
It
is important to use this checklist and other Information
Commissioner’s Office (ICO) resources to work out the main
differences between the current law and the GDPR. The ICO is
producing new guidance and other tools to assist you, as well as
contributing to guidance that the Article 29 Working Party is
producing at the European level. These are all available via the
ICO’s Overview of the General Data Protection
Regulation. The ICO is also working closely with trade
associations and bodies representing the various sectors – you
should also work closely with these bodies to share knowledge about
implementation in your sector.
It
is essential to plan your approach to GDPR compliance now and to gain
‘buy in’ from key people in your organisation. You may need, for
example, to put new procedures in and individuals’ rights
provisions. In a large or complex business this could have
significant budgetary, IT, personnel, governance and communications
implications.
The
GDPR places greater emphasis on the documentation that data
controllers must keep to demonstrate their accountability. Compliance
with all the areas listed in this document will require organisations
to review their approach to governance and how they manage data
protection as a corporate issue. One aspect of this might be to
review the
contracts
and other arrangements you have in place when sharing data with other
organisations.
Some
parts of the GDPR will have more of an impact on some organisations
than on others (for example, the provisions relating to profiling or
children’s data), so it would be useful to map out which parts of
the GDPR will have the greatest impact on your business model and
give those areas due prominence in your planning process.
…......
Step
9: Data
breaches
You
should make sure you have the right procedures in place to detect,
report and investigate a personal data breach. Some organisations are
already required to notify the ICO (and possibly some other bodies)
when they suffer a personal data breach. The GDPR introduces a duty
on all organisations to report certain types of data breach to the
ICO, and in some cases, to individuals. You only have to notify the
ICO of a breach where it is likely to result in a risk to the rights
and freedoms of individuals – if, for example, it could result in
discrimination, damage to reputation, financial loss, loss of
confidentiality
or
any other significant economic or social disadvantage.
Where
a breach is likely to result in a high risk to the rights and
freedoms of individuals, you will also have to notify those concerned
directly in most cases. You should put procedures in place to
effectively detect, report and investigate a personal data breach.
You may wish to assess the types of personal data you hold and
document where you would be required to notify the ICO or affected
individuals if a breach occurred. Larger
organisations
will need to develop policies and procedures for managing data
breaches. Failure to report a breach when required to do so could
result in a fine, as well as a fine for the breach itself.
Step
10: Data Protection by Design and Data Protection Impact
Assessments
It
has always been good practice to adopt a privacy by design approach
and to carry out a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) as part of this.
However, the GDPR makes privacy by design an express legal
requirement, under the term ‘data protection by design and by
default’. It also makes PIAs – referred to as ‘Data Protection
Impact Assessments’ or DPIAs – mandatory in certain
circumstances.
A
DPIA is required in situations where data processing is likely to
result in high risk to individuals, for example:
where a new technology is
being deployed;
where a profiling
operation is likely to significantly affect individuals; or
where there is processing
on a large scale of the special categories of data.
If
a DPIA indicates that the data processing is high risk, and you
cannot sufficiently address those risks, you will be required to
consult the ICO to seek its opinion as to whether the processing
operation complies with the GDPR.
You
should therefore start to assess the situations where it will be
necessary to conduct a DPIA. Who will do it? Who else needs to be
involved? Will the process be run centrally or locally?
You
should also familiarise yourself now with the guidance
the ICO has produced on PIAs as well as
guidance from the Article 29 Working
Party, and work out how to implement
them in your organisation. This guidance shows how PIAs can link to
other organisational processes such as risk management and project
management.
Step 11:
Data Protection Officers
You
should designate someone to take responsibility for data protection
compliance and assess where this role will sit within your
organisation’s structure and governance arrangements.
You
should consider whether you are required to formally designate a Data
Protection Officer (DPO).
You
must designate a DPO if you are:
a
public authority (except for courts acting in their judicial
capacity);
an
organisation that carries out the regular and systematic monitoring
of individuals on a large scale; or
an
organisation that carries out the large scale processing of special
categories of data, such as health records, or information about
criminal convictions. The Article 29 Working Party has produced
guidance for organisations on the designation, position and tasks of
DPOs.
It
is most important that someone in your organisation, or an external
data protection advisor, takes proper responsibility for your
data protection compliance and has the knowledge, support and
authority to carry out their role effectively.
Step
12: International
If
your organisation operates in more than one EU member state, you
should determine your lead data protection supervisory authority and
document this. The lead authority is the supervisory authority in the
state where your main establishment is. Your main establishment is
the location where your central administration in the EU is or else
the location where decisions about the purposes and means of
processing are taken and
implemented.
This is only relevant where you carry out cross-border processing –
ie you
have
establishments in more than one EU member state or you have a single
establishment in the EU that carries out processing which
substantially affects individuals in other EU states.
If
this applies to your organisation, you should map out where your
organisation makes its most significant decisions about its
processing factivities. This will help to
determine your ‘main establishment’ and therefore your lead
supervisory authority.
The
Article 29 Working party has produced guidance
on identifying a controller or processor’s lead supervisory
authority.