The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a European Union law that governs how companies may collect and use the personal data of EU residents. It establishes standards that help ensure that this data is not stored, handled or shared in a way that would expose individuals to risk. The law also specifies how organizations must respond in case of a data breach.
A key feature of the GDPR is that it codifies a set of specific data subject rights which empower individuals to make specific data subject access requests to organizations. This article details what those requests are and how your organization is required to handle them. It also offers solutions that can help you provide prompt and accurate responses to GDPR data requests so you can avoid penalties of ten million euros or more.
Request One-to-One Demo:Under the GDPR, EU residents have specific rights concerning the personal data that organizations have about them. Key examples of personal data include:
When an individual makes a data access request, the first step, of course, is for the organization to see whether the organization is storing or processing any personal data belonging to that person. If not, they need to report that negative finding to the individual, and their job is done.
On the other hand, if the organization is storing or processing data for the person, they must proceed to a second stage and process the individual’s specific request. The next section explains the types of requests and how to handle them.
Download Free Guide:Here are 6 types of requests that individuals exercising their rights under the GDPR can make and what they mean to your organization.
This inquiry is founded in two rights:
This type of request is founded in the right to rectification (Article 16),whichrequires organizations to ensure that all personal data they store is accurate and up to date. Data subjects have the right to request that inaccurate personal data be corrected or incomplete data be completed.
To ensure compliance, you need tight integration across your all data systems and processes so that data updated in one system is automatically corrected across all other locations.
This type of request covers two rights:
The organization can deny the erasure request if it violates any of the following:
Note that even if your company is allowed to retain a person’s data, you need to get their consent for further processing.
The right to data portability (Article 20) empowers EU residents to require a company to move their personal data to another service provider. This right promotes interoperability by facilitating the transfer of user data between data controllers. It also encourages competition between digital services because users can switch between providers without losing their personal data.
Complying with this provision involves providing the data in a structured, machine-readable format that you can transmit directly to the other party.
Individuals have the right to object to data processing activities (Article 21), such as using their personal data for marketing or other purposes. Valid reasons for denying this type of request include demonstrating any of the following:
The GDPR also confers rights in relation to automated decision-making and profiling (Article 22). If you have automated decision-making and profiling in place for personal data, you have to provide “meaningful information about the logic involved, as well as the significance and the envisaged consequences of such processing for the data subject.”
The three valid reasons for performing automatic processing and profiling are:
To avoid violations that might result in costly fines, ensure that employees do not process information through automated features without verifying there is a valid reason to do so.
Netwrix’s GDPR compliance software can give you confident that you’re able to handle all these types of data requests smoothly by discovering all information you store about an individual in just a few clicks.
More broadly, Netwrix solutions can help your organization protect all of its sensitive and regulated data. You can establish strong data governance, remove inappropriate access, enforce security policies, and detect advanced threats in a timely manner to avoid the high costs of security breaches and compliance violations.
Our team of experts has a solid understanding of not just the GDPR but the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and many other data security regulations. They provide organizations with tailored, focused advice to meet their compliance needs. To learn more, sign up for a demo or download a mapping of GDPR requirements and Netwrix functionality.
What is a GDPR request?
Data subject access request GDPR requirements allow individuals to ask an organization to provide a copy of the personal data it stores about them, erase their data, transfer the data to another provider, and so on. Organizations that fail to comply with these requests within the specified time period face steep fines.
What is the right of access request under GDPR?
A right of access is also known as “subject access.” This is the right individuals have to access copies of their own personal information and data, as well as supplementary data, under the protection regulation GDPR. The right is designed to empower individuals to know how and why organizations are using their data.
What does the right of access include under GDPR?
The information that data subjects have the right to access under the GDPR includes:
If any personal data will be going to a third country without adequate protection, the data subjects need to be told about the safeguards being used to protect their data.
What are the rights of data subjects under the GDPR?
Under the GDPR, data subjects have certain rights that they can exercise in relation to their personal data. These rights include:
Do companies need to comply with the GDPR?
Every organization that stores or processes the data of EU residents must comply with the GDPR. Failure to comply can result in fines of up to 2% of the company’s entire global turnover for the preceding fiscal year or 10 million euros, whichever is greater.
Anthony is a seasoned executive in the IT industry, with over 25 years of experience. At Netwrix, he serves as Field CISO for the EMEA and APAC regions, leveraging his expertise to ensure that partners and customers are well equipped to face the challenges of cybersecurity.