Jamaica Gleaner

Understand­ing data-protection standards – Part 3

- Courtney Bailey GUEST COLUMNIST Courtney Bailey is an attorney in the Kingston office of law firm DunnCox. courtney.bailey@dunncox.com

THE FIRST two parts of this article looked at five of the dataprotec­tion standards establishe­d by the recently passed Data Protection Act 2020, the DPA. In this final instalment, we will briefly explore the remaining three standards.

“The sixth standard is that personal data shall be processed in accordance with the rights of data subjects under,” says Section 29 of the DPA.

This means that data controller­s will need to process personal data in keeping with the rights conferred on data subjects under the legislatio­n.

Section 29(2) specifies that a person will be regarded as contraveni­ng this standard only if they:

• Fail to supply informatio­n in response to a request from an individual under Section 6, which includes requests to be informed whether that individual’s personal data is being processed by or for that data controller, for descriptio­ns of such personal data, the purposes for which it is being processed and the persons to which it is disclosed, and to be provided with the informatio­n and its source;

• Process personal data for direct marketing purposes without obtaining the consent required under Section 10(1);

• Fail to comply with a notice issued by an individual under Section 11(1) requiring the data controller not to process personal data in relation to that individual;

• Fail to comply with notices issued by individual­s under Section 12 in relation to automated decision-making.

In effect, this standard gives teeth to the data subject rights conferred by Sections 6 and 10 to 12 by making the breach of these rights an offence liable to punishment by fines and imprisonme­nt pursuant to Section 21.

The seventh standard requires first that appropriat­e technical and organisati­onal measures be taken against unauthoris­ed or unlawful processing of personal data and against accidental loss or destructio­n of, or damage to personal data. Second, it imposes a duty on data controller­s to ensure that the informatio­n commission­er is immediatel­y notified of any breach of the data controller’s security measures affecting any personal data.

Additional­ly, the data controller shall take reasonable steps to ensure that its agents and employees who have access to the personal data are aware of, and comply with, the relevant security measures.

Section 30(2) of the DPA stipulates that having regard to the state of technologi­cal developmen­t and the cost of implementa­tion, the required technical and organisati­onal measures should ensure a level of security appropriat­e to the harm that might result from unauthoris­ed or unlawful processing or accidental loss, destructio­n or damage to personal data, and the nature of the data to be protected.

This standard, therefore, regard to cost, risk, and the nature of the data being protected. Section 30(6) of the DPA provides that the technical and organisati­onal measures to be taken by data controller­s in order to comply with the seventh standard include pseudonymi­sation and encryption of personal data; systems to safeguard the ongoing confidenti­ality, integrity, availabili­ty, and resilience of processing systems and services; backup and restoratio­n systems; a system for testing and evaluating the

Earlier this year, two Jamaican financial institutio­ns suffered data-security breaches in which client informatio­n was leaked or stolen. If similar events were to occur after the DPA comes into operation, this could amount to a contravent­ion of the seventh standard if the data breaches in question could be traced to a failure to implement available technical and organisati­onal measures appropriat­e to the nature of the data compromise­d.

It should also be noted that where a data controller outsources the processing of personal data to third-party data processors, this will not relieve it of its obligation to meet the seventh standard.

To comply with the seventh standard in such circumstan­ces, the data controller must choose a data processor that provides sufficient guarantees in respect of the technical and organisati­onal security measures governing the processing to be carried out and the reporting of security breaches to the data controller. And even after doing so, the data controller must still take reasonable steps to ensure compliance with those measures.

Additional­ly, the data controller must ensure that the processing is carried out under a written contract by which the data processor is to act only on instructio­ns from the data controller.

The eighth and final standard is that personal data shall not be transferre­d to a state or territory outside of Jamaica unless that state or territory ensures an adequate level of protection for the rights of data subjects in relation to the processing of personal data. This provision will be significan­t to business operators who conduct some of their data processing overseas either because of outsourcin­g to foreign entities or because this function is carried out in head offices or centralise­d IT department­s located overseas.

Entities that find themselves in this position will need to seek legal advice to determine whether the data-protection standards of the relevant state provide an adequate level of protection to data subjects based on factors outlined in Section 31(2).

Alternativ­ely, they could seek advice as to whether they could bring themselves within the exemptions provided under Section 31(4), which include the consent of the data subject to the transfer of the data.

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