The European Union's Article 29 Working Party, which consists of
the privacy regulators from the 27 EU nations, have published an
opinion on an as-yet unpublished European Commission policy change
on the transfer of personal data outside the European Economic Area
(EEA).
It said that the Commission needs to adopt a more consistent
approach in its policy governing processors.
Companies that handle personal data are required by the EU's
Data Protection Directive to make sure that any outsourcing
providers they use give adequate protection and security for that
data, even if those providers are outside the EU and so not
directly bound by the Directive.
Organisations commonly use European Commission-produced model
contracts to pass those obligations on, but these only cover the
signatories of the contract; they do not pass liability on to
sub-contractors used by the outsourcing provider.
This has caused complications for businesses and the Commission
has produced an unpublished proposal to change the rules to make
the process more attractive to businesses. The Working Party has
published its opinion on those proposals, though, and it has some
criticisms of them.
The Working Party opinion suggests that the Commission has
proposed allowing outsourcing providers to pass on data to
subcontractors with only an authorisation from the organisation
that owns the data for that transfer and sub-processing.
It said, though, that the Commission plans to make those
outsourcing providers that are established in the EEA and which
want to sub-contract to firms outside the EEA use full model
contracts, meaning that their obligations are more onerous than
those of non-EEA suppliers.
"The Working Party is aware that the adoption of this Draft
Commission Decision would introduce a remarkable flexibility in
processing services," said its opinion. "However, this flexibility
would not apply equally to the different players in an increasingly
global market."
"The Draft Commission Decision would allow a processor
established in a third country to carry out onward transfers for
the purposes of sub-processing only with an authorization granted
by the controller, while those processors established in the EU/EEA
and which would like to subcontract part of their processing
activities to a sub processor in a third country should continue to
use the current legal system," it said. "This situation could cause
a competitive disadvantage for European companies that would be
required to bear an administrative burden greater than that of
their equivalents in third countries, in order to perform
equivalent processing as service providers."
The Working Party said that a solution exists which would create
a level playing field between those outsourcing providers in the
EEA and those outside it.
"The Working Party urges the Commission to develop promptly a
new separate and specific legal instrument that allows
international sub-processing by processors established in the Union
to sub-processors in a third country," it said. "Such an instrument
could for instance take the form of a new set of Standard
Contractual Clauses, through which the controller and the processor
established in the EU/EEA could provide for trans border
sub-processing, in accordance with the necessary and adequate
guarantees for such transfers."
The Working Party also recommends that Commission rules include
a provision forcing outsourcing suppliers to get the explicit
permission of a company before using sub-processors, and that all
sub-processors should be bound by the same terms as a model
contract, 'cascading' those controls through the processing
chain.
"Applying contractual clauses to all different layers of
sub-processing operations will introduce greater uniformity in
business as all subcontracts of processing operations covered by
the standard contractual clauses shall be subject to the same
clauses and stipulations. In addition this will simplify current
situation by increasing legal certainty," it said.
To ensure that the use of personal data is appropriate, the
Working Party also said that the data protection regulator of the
country in which the originating company is based should have the
right to audit all the processing, that that right should be a part
of the contract which is 'cascaded' down the chain.
Data protection law expert Rosemary Jay said that the
proposals should be welcomed, even if they are not all likely to be
adopted.
"Some of these are not entirely realistic, but the Working Party
has produced a single, coherent code to govern sub-processing, and
that should be welcomed by businesses because it would produce a
level playing field in the competitive outsourcing sector," she
said.
"It is good that there is at least some action being taken in an
area that businesses have long seen as a problem," said Jay. "It is
good that the Working Party have backed the cascading approach, but
they have not come up with a way to make that approach any more
flexible."
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