Today, the European Commission (“EU Commission”) formally approved a new transatlantic framework for the transfer of personal data from Europe to the United States (“U.S.”) (the “Privacy Shield”). Under the EU Commission’s decision approving the new framework ( the “Adequacy Decision”), U.S. organizations participating in the Privacy Shield will be deemed to ensure an “adequate level of protection” for the transfers of personal data from Europe to the U.S.. The Privacy Shield is the result of extensive negotiations between the EU Commission and the U.S. Department of Commerce (the “DOC”) as well as substantial discussions among the EU institutions and EU Member States.
Below we have answered some of the most important questions you may have with respect to the Privacy Shield.
What is the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield?
The Privacy Shield is a framework for the transfer of personal data from Europe to the U.S. It has been developed by the EU Commission and the U.S. DOC and is intended to replace the EU-U.S. Safe Harbor, a transatlantic data transfer framework established in 2000 (the “Safe Harbor”) that was invalidated by the European Court of Justice’s October 6, 2015 ruling in Maximillian Schrems v. Data Protection Commissioner.
The legal instruments establishing the Privacy Shield consist of the EU Commission’s Adequacy Decision as well as a series of annexes that set out the applicable details and procedures along with commitments undertaken by the U.S. government to ensure the Privacy Shield’s proper functioning. The core of the framework are seven “Privacy Shield Principles” that participating organizations must comply with when processing personal data transferred under the program. These principles are: (i) Notice; (ii) Choice; (iii) Security; (iv) Data Integrity and Purpose Limitation; (v) Access; (vi) Accountability for Onward Transfers; and (vii) Recourse, Enforcement and Liability. In the view of the EU Commission, the Privacy Shield arrangements reflect the requirements set out by the Court of Justice in the Schrems case.
Participation in the Privacy Shield is voluntary. In order to participate, U.S. organizations must register to be included on the Privacy Shield List and self-certify that they meet the program’s requirements. Participating organizations submit to monitoring by the DOC and agree to be subject to program’s enforcement and redress mechanisms.
The Privacy Shield is not the only means available to transfer personal data to the U.S. compliant with EU data protection law. At present, other mechanisms include transfers made pursuant to EU Standard Contractual Clauses as well as intra-group company transfers made pursuant to Binding Corporate Rules.
What are the countries in scope of the Privacy Shield?
The Privacy Shield will cover transfers of personal data made to U.S. organizations from the Member States of the European Economic Area (the “EEA”), which includes the 28 EU Member States plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein. Transfers of personal data from Switzerland are not within the scope of the Privacy Shield. Switzerland may decide to negotiate a new data transfer framework to replace its existing arrangement with U.S., which is analogous in substance to the now-defunct Safe Harbor.
Notwithstanding the “Brexit” referendum on June 23, 2016, personal data may be compliantly transferred from the United Kingdom (the “UK”) under the Privacy Shield once the program is up and running, pending the UK’s formal withdrawal from the European Union and the UK’s adoption of legislation amending or superseding the UK Data Protection Act 1998. In the meantime, the 1998 Act, which implements the EU Data Protection Directive (the “Directive”), remains the law of the land, and the UK is bound to implement decisions taken under the Directive, including the Adequacy Decision on the Privacy Shield framework. The conditions applicable to the transfers from the UK will need to be re-assessed following the UK’s exit from the EU, which will take up to two years following formal invocation of the withdrawal procedure, and has not yet been commenced.
What are the core changes in the Privacy Shield compared to Safe Harbor?
Do Safe Harbor certified companies benefit from an easy entry to certify under the Privacy Shield?
U.S. organizations that formerly participated in the Safe Harbor framework will need to certify anew with DOC in order to participate in the Privacy Shield. As noted, the Privacy Shield includes new or modified procedural and substantive requirements as compared to the Safe Harbor. All companies, regardless of whether they participated in the Safe Harbor, will need to comply with all Privacy Shield requirements in order to participate in the new arrangement. However, Safe Harbor participants will be able to leverage efforts made to conform privacy policies, practices and governance structures to Safe Harbor requirements.
Does certification into the Privacy Shield require renewal?
Yes, Privacy Shield participants must make self-recertification submissions to the DOC on at least an annual basis. If a participant fails to re-certify, it will be removed from the Privacy Shield List.
What liability do we face towards EU residents under the Privacy Shield?
The Privacy Shield introduces several new obligations and an escalated procedure for the handling of complaints from EU residents:
What type of scrutiny should we expect from U.S. agencies (Department of Commerce, Federal Trade Commission)?
The Privacy Shield contains numerous provisions aimed at ensuring that U.S. agencies monitor compliance.
Can a company lose its Privacy Shield certification?
Yes. Persistent failure to comply with the Privacy Shield Principles will mean removal from the Privacy Shield List and organizations struck from the list must return or destroy personal data collected under the Privacy Shield, which may have significant impacts in practice. In other cases of removal, the DOC will ensure that companies that are no longer participants in the Privacy Shield continue to apply its principles to personal data received while they were participants for as long as they retain the data for legitimate purposes.
The DOC will maintain a list of organizations that have been removed from the Privacy Shield List and provide a link to Privacy Shield-related FTC cases that are maintained on the FTC’s website with a view to “name and shame” non-compliant organizations.
What are our obligations under the Privacy Shield when we transfer EU data to vendors or third party processors?
To disclose EU data to vendors or third-party processors, Privacy Shield organizations must meet several new obligations:
Are there any benefits to registering for Privacy Shield quickly?
Yes. Companies that self-certify for the Privacy Shield within two months after it enters into force have nine months to bring their existing vendor relationships into compliance with onward transfer restrictions.
It may be inferred that companies that register after the two-month period will have less time to fix compliance issues with vendors and may be exposed to liability claims for non-compliance as a result.
If we register for Privacy Shield, are we suddenly subject to EU data protection law?
Generally not. Registering for the Privacy Shield will not automatically subject a U.S. company to EU data protection law. At the same time, however, companies should be mindful of the new General Data Protection Regulation (the “GDPR”) that will enter into force on May 25, 2018. Under Article 3(2) of the GDPR, a U.S. company – regardless of whether it is a controller or processor – is subject to EU data protection law if it (a) offers goods or services to EU residents, or (b) monitors the behavior of EU residents. If the activities a U.S. company performs with the EU data it receives via the Privacy Shield trigger either of these conditions, the company will be subject to EU data protection law regardless of whether it participates in the Privacy Shield.
How long can we retain the EU data that we have imported from the EU under the Privacy Shield?
Privacy Shield companies may store the data “in a form identifying or making identifiable the individual” only as long as the data serves original purposes for which it was collected or for compatible processing purposes. Otherwise, the data must be anonymized or deleted. This requirement was a key element in recent negotiations between the EU and the U.S., raised at the urging of the EU Parliament and EU DPAs, which emphasized the need for a clear data retention limitation principle.
As of what date will we be able to register?
According to a statement today by the U.S. State Secretary of Commerce, Penny Pritzker, the DOC will begin accepting registration applications as of August 1, 2016.
What do we need for our Privacy Shield registration?
To self-certify for the Privacy Shield, an organization must provide the DOC a self-certification submission, signed by a corporate officer on behalf of the organization, that contains at least the following information:
We, at Alston & Bird, will monitor the implementation of the Privacy Shield and keep you updated of any development of interest. For more information on the Privacy Shield, please consult the website of the EU Commission at: http://ec.europa.eu/justice/data-protection/international-transfers/eu-us-privacy-shield/index_en.htm.
Dan’s clients receive operations-ready management of their complex privacy, security, and technology issues, as well as seamless interactions with stakeholders. Fluent in German with a U.S. litigation background, Dan helps companies of all sizes across industries and jurisdictions resolve data-related matters at the local, national, and international levels.
This blog is a service of Alston & Bird’s Privacy, Cyber & Data Strategy team and focuses on key data privacy and data security issues.