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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 1 June 2013
'Modernising' Data Protection Convention 108: A Safe Basis for a Global Privacy Treaty?
Graham Greenleaf,
University of New South Wales
This paper is available for download at
Available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2262296
Citation
This paper may be referenced as [2013] UNSWLRS 33.
Abstract
Proposals for the reform or
‘modernisation’ of Council of Europe Data Protection Convention 108
have now been forwarded
from the Convention’s Consultative Committee for
consideration by the Council of Ministers. In most respects, the proposed
changes greatly strengthen the Convention, and incorporate within it the
provisions currently in its Additional Protocol.
The
‘globalisation’ of Convention 108 (developing it into a global data
privacy agreement, open to all countries providing
the required level of data
protection) is also now underway, and Uruguay has become the first non-European
state to become a Party
to the Convention. The two processes are symbiotic, with
the attraction of globalisation to non-European states (and to the current
European member States) depending on the modernisation process establishing a
level of data protection that is ‘just right’.
It can’t be too
hot (setting standards to high) or too cold (setting standards too low so that
it requires exports of personal
data to other countries offering little data
protection). Modernisation must pass the Goldilocks Test.
This
paper assesses the changes proposed to the Convention at this stage of the
process, It strengthens the obligations of Parties
to implement the Convention
as a matter of effective practice, not just as a law on paper. It tightens most
of the existing data
protection principles, and adds new ones which better align
the Convention with the EU Directive (and proposed Regulation). Stronger
powers
for supervisory authorities, and ‘judicial and non-judicial’
sanctions and remedies for violations increase the
domestic enforcement
requirements. The Convention Committee (as it will now be called) is given
explicit new functions including
assessing candidates for accession, and
periodically reviewing implementation by existing parties, making it more like
the EU’s
Article 29 Working Party. The procedures for accession by
non-European states are clarified. Overall, these proposals seem to be
‘just right’.
However, while the proposals concerning
the required standard for data export limitations seem to be a reasonable
compromise in some
respects, but in other respects as are so ill-defined that
they are dangerous for data subjects. The existing standard that (in general)
personal data can only be exported if the recipient provides
‘adequate’ protection, adhered to by the Committee as recently
as
mid-2012, has been abandoned in favour of an undefined requirement of
‘appropriate’ protection. Other aspect of the
data export provisions
are also ill-defined. For anyone whose main interest is strong data protection
standards, such as civil society
organisations, these are the key provisions of
the Convention. If they are faulty, this cannot be compensated for by otherwise
strong
provisions, because accession would then mean a commitment to export
personal data to places which offer low protection.
The paper
situates the risk of abandoning meaningful data export restrictions in the
context of the current strategy of the USA to
push for
‘interoperability’ of very different data protection standards, even
where such standards do not arise from
legal instruments of comparable types or
embodying comparable standards. Those who support data protection need to help
stiffen European
resolve to confront the challenges presented by American
pressure to prematurely adopt ‘interoperability’, and the ideologies
that drive it.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/UNSWLRS/2013/33.html