DATA PROTECTION
European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS): published the Opinion 9/2016 on Personal Information Management Systems (PIMS).
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) provides individuals with increased control over how their personal data is collected and used online, but more can and should be done to ensure that individuals are able to take back control of their online identities. In this perspective, the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) published his Opinion 9/2016 on Personal Information Management Systems (PIMS).
The recently adopted GDPR provides for increased transparency, powerful rights of access and data portability, giving individuals more control over their data. However, it is not the final step in this process. Instead, it should be seen as the foundation for further efforts to improve how we enforce control over our online identities.
In his earlier Opinion on coherent enforcement of fundamental rights in the age of Big Data, published on 23 September 2016, the EDPS noted that current market conditions and business practices make it difficult for individuals to exercise their right to the protection of personal data and to other fundamental rights. In his Opinion on PIMS, the EDPS outlines his vision of a new reality, in which individuals, rather than online service providers, are able to manage and control their online identity.
The basic idea behind PIMS is that individuals would be able to store their personal data in secure, online storage systems and decide when and with whom to share it. As an emerging technology, a variety of designs and business models currently exist. However, they all share idea of strengthening fundamental rights in the digital world, whilst creating new business opportunities for PIMS providers, who would act as intermediaries between the individual and the online services they use.
PIMS technology may help to give individuals and consumers more control over their personal data. The EDPS encourages the Commission to support the development of innovative digital tools such as this and take policy initiatives that inspire the development of economically viable business models to facilitate their use. Effective implementation of data protection requires technological, economical and legal initiatives, which will help us to take back control of our online identities.
(Source: Web site EDPS – Press Release no. 16/2016 as of October 20th, 2016- Ownership of the contents: European data Protection Supervisor).
The recently adopted GDPR provides for increased transparency, powerful rights of access and data portability, giving individuals more control over their data. However, it is not the final step in this process. Instead, it should be seen as the foundation for further efforts to improve how we enforce control over our online identities.
In his earlier Opinion on coherent enforcement of fundamental rights in the age of Big Data, published on 23 September 2016, the EDPS noted that current market conditions and business practices make it difficult for individuals to exercise their right to the protection of personal data and to other fundamental rights. In his Opinion on PIMS, the EDPS outlines his vision of a new reality, in which individuals, rather than online service providers, are able to manage and control their online identity.
The basic idea behind PIMS is that individuals would be able to store their personal data in secure, online storage systems and decide when and with whom to share it. As an emerging technology, a variety of designs and business models currently exist. However, they all share idea of strengthening fundamental rights in the digital world, whilst creating new business opportunities for PIMS providers, who would act as intermediaries between the individual and the online services they use.
PIMS technology may help to give individuals and consumers more control over their personal data. The EDPS encourages the Commission to support the development of innovative digital tools such as this and take policy initiatives that inspire the development of economically viable business models to facilitate their use. Effective implementation of data protection requires technological, economical and legal initiatives, which will help us to take back control of our online identities.
(Source: Web site EDPS – Press Release no. 16/2016 as of October 20th, 2016- Ownership of the contents: European data Protection Supervisor).