The GDPR term is hitting hard the European economy by May 2018. The term General Data protection regulation is for the companies which have the day-to-day responsibilities related to Data protection. It has already taken over the market and has become the new buzzword. Our blog editor decided to attend the event by Professor Ian Walden from the centre for commercial law studies, Queen Mary University. The event was held at the academic building of the London School of Economics and Political Science. Professor Ian has been working with data protection for the last 30 years, since 1984 and has detailed knowledge about the changes and the new laws which has been enforced.
During the London School of Economics event, GDPR was discussed from different aspects. GDPR is a product of 6 years of negotiation and is one of the most lobbied pieces of legislation. Professor also discussed the failure of harmonization, the variation, legal uncertainties and cross-border difficulties. The most informative part was the history and the decisions which will affect the United Kingdom on May 25, 2018. The privacy of each user is very important to the individual and not just data protection but the concept of GDPR will come to the United Kingdom.
What is GDPR and let’s talk about its history
GDPR the word itself sounds interesting and has a much more deep meaning to it. General Data Protection Regulation is an EU regulation and has been created to protect existing data. Initially enacted in 1995, the law was established much before the internet came into use, which now is completely changed. It is the result of 4 years of hard work by the EU to bring data protection legislation in collaboration with new ways.
The new era is more about creating, sharing, using and storing information. GDPR is not coming into the act for just data protection but also for approaching data privacy and security. GDPR is a regulation that should be followed rigidly across Europe and others to maintain the protection of personal data.
Currently, the UK is dependent on Data Protection Act 1998, enacted after the 1995 act by the EU. The new legislation introduced much more serious fines for breaches and give the customer a higher say about what companies can do with their data.
What was the reason behind GDPR?
The reason the drive GDPR into regulation is the two different concepts. First and the most important is Personal control. EU wants to make sure individual has full control over how their data is been used. The current regulation in the Uk and Europe have been enacted according to old times and now need updating after the Cloud technology and internet has come into use. Merging these new regulations assume to provide more trust in the digital economy. The second important fact that made Eu take this decision was to give businesses a simpler and legal environment.
How will it affect companies?
Earlier companies were not affected by how they could use their customer data but as the GDPR comes into action the new regulation will affect the companies and how the data can be used for different processes. The main focus is consent, the companies will face the new challenge of taking customer consent for every single procedure from, fraud checks to maintenance and fraud checks to another nitty-gritty process.
Thank you so much for the informative article. Interesting to see GDPR in the Context
Great Article! I agree that due to exchange of personal data between the public and private sector and new developments have brought new challenges for protection of this data, now new laws needed to secure this data. I appreciate the post Apri..