Data protection
Better rules for small business
Stronger rules on data protection from 25 May 2018 mean citizens have more control over their data and business benefits from a level playing field. One set of rules for all companies operating in the EU, wherever they are based. Find out what this means for your SME.
What is
 personal data?
                                    - Name
- Address
- Localisation
- Online identifier
- Health information
- Income
- Cultural profile
- and more
 
                                        This is for you too.
Why change
 the rules?
                                    It's about trust...
A lack of trust in old data protection rules held back the digital economy and quite possibly your business.
of people feel they have complete control over the information they provide online.
And helping business boom...
One set of rules for all companies processing data in the EU
Doing business just got easier and fairer
New rules boost consumer confidence and in turn business.
What your company
 must do
                                    Protect the rights of people giving you their data
Communication
Use plain language.
Tell them who you are when
 you request the data.
Say why you are processing
 their data, how long it will
 be stored and who receives it.
Consent
Consent is one of the legal grounds for processing data 
(together with contract, legitimate interest, legal obligations, etc.).
If you rely on it, 
consent should be given by a clear affirmative action.
Access and 
portability
                                                                                
                                                                                        
    Let people access their data 
and give it to another company.
  
                                                                                    
Warnings
                                                                                        
    Inform people of data breaches
 if there is a serious risk to them.
  
                                                                                    
Erase data
                                                                                        
    Give people
 the ‘right to be forgotten’.
 Erase their personal data
 if they ask,
 but only if it doesn’t compromise
 freedom of expression
 or the ability to research.
  
                                                                                    
Profiling
                                                                                        
    If you use profiling
 to process applications
 for legally-binding agreements like
 loans you must:
  
                                                                                    
- Inform your customers;
- Make sure you have a person, not a machine, checking the process
 if the application ends in a refusal;
- Offer the applicant the right to contest the decision;
- Ensure an appropriate legal basis to carry out such profiling.
Marketing
                                                                                        
    Give people the right
 to opt out of direct marketing
 that uses their data.
  
                                                                                    
                                                                                        Safeguarding
 sensitive
 data
                                                                                    
                                                                                Use extra safeguards for information on health, race, sexual orientation, religion and political beliefs.
Children's data
                                                                                        
    Collecting data from children under 16?
 Under the GDPR you must get parental consent. However, each EU Member State can lower this threshold to between 13 and 16 years of age, so check the age limit.
  
                                                                                    
                                                                                        Data transfer
 outside
 the EU
                                                                                    
                                                                                Check availability of transfer tool like model contract clauses when there is no adequacy decision for the country of destination.
Do data protection by design
Processing data for another company?
Make sure you have a watertight contract listing the responsibilities of each party.
Check if you need a data protection officer
Keep records
Anticipate with impact assessments
- 
                                                            New technologies 
- 
                                                            Automatic, 
 systematic processing
 and evaluation of
 personal
 information
- 
                                                            Large-scale 
 monitoring of a
 publicly accessible area (e.g. CCTV)
- 
                                                            Large-scale 
 processing of sensitive
 data like biometrics
The cost of
 non-compliance
                                        
                                    Warning
Reprimand
    Suspension
of data
 processing
  
                                                        
Fine
      Up 
        to €20
 million
    
or
4%
 of global annual turnover
  
Need help ?
About the regulation and data protection
Contact your National Data Protection Authority (DPA)



 
			 
                 Name and contact details of business
Name and contact details of business