Article contents
The “Riskification” of European Data Protection Law through a two-fold Shift
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 October 2017
Abstract
The importance of the concept of risk and risk management in the data protection field has grown explosively with the adoption of the General Data Protection Regulation (2016/679). The article explores the concept and the role of risk, as well as associated risk regulation mechanisms in EU data protection law. It shows that with the adoption of the General Data Protection Regulation there is evidence of a two-fold shift: first on a practical level, a shift towards risk-based data protection enforcement and compliance, and second a shift towards risk regulation on the broader regulatory level. The article analyses these shifts to enhance the understanding of the changing relationship between risk and EU data protection law. The article also discusses associated potential challenges when trying to manage multiple and heterogeneous risks to the rights and freedoms of individuals resulting from the processing of personal data.
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Footnotes
PhD Candidate, Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society (TILT), Tilburg University. The author would like to thank Claudia Quelle, Damian Clifford and the anonymous reviewer for their helpful and constructive comments, which contributed to improving the final version of the paper. Any errors or omissions remain the responsibility of the author.
References
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105 ISO/IEC 29100 Privacy framework, 15 December 2011.
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109 Ulrich Dammann and Spiros Simitis, EG-Datenschutzrichtlinie:Kommentar (Nomos, 1997) Art 17.7.
110 Art 18 does not mention the word “risk” as such, but refers to it as a likelihood of adverse effect to the rights and freedoms of data subjects.
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113 Korff, supra, note 111. For a detailed overview of the operations subject to prior checking in different EU Member States see Gwendal Le Grand and Emilie Barrau, “Prior Checking, a Forerunner to Privacy Impact Assessments” in David Wright and Paul De Hert (eds), Privacy Impact Assessment (Springer, 2012) 97.
114 Amended proposal for a Council Directive on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (“Amended Proposal”), COM (92) 422 final – SYN 287, 15 October 1992. It can be accessed at the Archive of European Integration of the University of Pittsburgh, at <http://aei.pitt.edu/10375> accessed 25 August 2017.
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118 Poullet, supra, note 116, 163.
119 Quelle, supra, note 14.
120 Spina, supra, note 1, 89–90.
121 Peter Hustinx, “EU Data Protection Law: The Review of Directive 95/46/EC and the Proposed General Data Protection Regulation” (2014) 20, 38, available at <https://edps.europa.eu/sites/edp/files/publication/14-09-15_article_eui_en.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017.
122 ibid.
123 Article 29 Data Protection Working Party, “Annex to the Letters from the Art. 29 WP to LV Ambassador Ilze Juhansone, MEP Jan Philip Albrecht, and Commissioner Vẽra Jourová in view of the trilogue” (17 June 2015) 15.
124 Quelle, supra, note 14.
125 WP 218, supra, note 61.
126 Baldwin, Cave and Lodge, supra, note 43, 282.
127 Ibid.
128 Black, Julia, “Risk Based Regulation: Choices, Practices and Lessons Being Learned” in Risk and Regulatory Policy: Improving the Governance of Risk (OECD, 2010)Google Scholar.
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130 Article 29 Data Protection Working Party, “Statement on the Role of a Risk-based Approach in Data Protection Legal Frameworks” 4.
131 Guidelines on Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) and determining whether processing is “likely to result in a high risk” for the purposes of Regulation 2016/679, WP 248, 4 April 2017.
132 Baldwin, Cave and Lodge, supra, note 43, 282.
133 Dutch Data Protection Authority, “Beleidsregels handhaving door het CBP (DPA policy rules for enforcement)” (2011), available at <https://cbpweb.nl/sites/default/files/atoms/files/beleidsregels_handhaving_cbp_0.pdf> accessed 14 February 2015.
134 The new approach of Information Commissioner’s Office (UK) (taken as from 1 April 2014) as regards its supervisory powers is described in Public Consultation paper “Our new Approach to Data Protection Concerns” (2013) , available at <https://ico.org.uk/media/about-the-ico/consultations/2019/a-new-approach-consultation.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017.
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138 ibid.
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141 Article 29 Data Protection Working Party, “Rules of Procedure of the Working Party on the Protection of Individuals with Regard to the Processing of Personal Data”, 15 February 2010, available at <http://ec.europa.eu/justice/policies/privacy/docs/wpdocs/rules-art-29_en.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017.
142 Guidelines on Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) and determining whether processing is “likely to result in a high risk” for the purposes of Regulation 2016/679, WP 248, 4 April 2017.
143 European Commission, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions Safeguarding Privacy in a Connected World A European Data Protection Framework for the 21st Century, COM/2012/09 final.
144 Regulation (EC) No 45/2001 of 18 December 2000 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data by the Community institutions and bodies and on the free movement of such data, OJ L 8, 12 January 2001.
145 The Article 29 Working Party has already started providing guidelines on high risk data processing operations see Guidelines on Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) and determining whether processing is “likely to result in a high risk” for the purposes of Regulation 2016/679, WP 248, 4 April 2017.
146 de Hert, Paul and Papakonstantinou, Vagelis, “The new General Data Protection Regulation: Still a sound system for the protection of individuals?” (2016) 32(2) Computer Law & Security Review 179, 193Google Scholar.
147 Black, supra, note 21, 309.
148 Wright, David and Mordini, Emilio, “Privacy and Ethical Impact Assessment” in David Wright and Paul de Hert (eds), Privacy Impact Assessment (Springer, 2012) 397, 402 Google Scholar.
149 David Wright et al, “A Privacy Impact Assessment Framework for data protection and privacy rights”, PIAF project Deliverable D1 (2011), A Report of the PIAF Consortium Prepared for the European Commission, <www.piafproject.eu> accessed 10 February 2015.
150 Information Commissioner’s Office, supra, note 129.
151 ibid 18.
152 Wright and Mordini, supra, note 148, 402.
153 Wright, David, “The state of the art in privacy impact assessment” (2012) 28(1) Computer Law & Security Review 54–61 Google Scholar.
154 David Wright, et al, “Precaution and privacy impact assessment as modes towards risk governance” in René von Schomberg (ed), Towards Responsible Research and Innovation in the Information and Communication Technologies and Security Technologies Fields, A Report from the European Commission Services, 95, available at <http://philpapers.org/archive/VONTRR.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017. (they claim “companies are not obliged to be as ‘democratic’ and participatory as governments in developed countries have to be. And the involvement of stakeholders in the development is notoriously difficult and costly even if the products, services or policies have the potential for intrusion on privacy or are ethically dubious. Furthermore, competition in the private sector, especially in the development and promotion of new products and services, often involves secrecy in the early stages”).
155 Centre for Information Policy Leadership, “A Risk-based Approach to Privacy: Improving Effectiveness in Practice” (2014), available at <www.hunton.com/files/upload/Post-Paris_Risk_Paper_June_2014.pdf> accessed 20 June 2017.
156 ibid 7.
157 Baldwin, Cave and Lodge, supra, note 43, 281.
158 ibid 281–282.
159 Although the goal of the EU Data Protection Directive is not framed in terms of addressing risks to privacy, the goal of other data protection laws and statutes, eg the first data protection legislation of the German Lander of Hesse or 1980 OECD Guidelines on the Protection of Privacy and Transborder Flows of Personal Data, may be considered to address the risks to privacy stemming from the development of new technologies. See Mayer-Schönberger, Viktor, “Generational Development of Data Protection in Europe” in Phillip E Agre and Marc Rotenberg (eds), Technology and Privacy: The New Landscape (The MIT Press, 1997) 219 Google Scholar (he states that the first data-protection laws were enacted in response to the emergence of electronic data processing within government and large corporations and the plans to centralise all personal data files in gigantic national data banks); Gellert (2015), supra, note 12 (he claims that the explicit object of many data protection statutes is to address the “risks to privacy” stemming from the development of ICTs).
160 Anton, Donald K and Shelton, Dinah L, Environmental Protection and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2011) 38 Google Scholar.
161 Lynskey, Orla, The Foundations of EU Data Protection Law (Oxford University Press, 2015)Google Scholar.
162 ibid 195.
163 Paul de Hert and Serge Gutwirth, “Data Protection in the Case Law of Strasbourg and Luxemburg: Constitutionalisation in Action” in Gutwirth, et al (eds), supra, note 72, 3; Lynskey, supra, note 161; Bernal, Paul, Internet Privacy Rights: Rights to Protect Autonomy (Cambridge University Press, 2014)Google Scholar.
164 Bing, J, “A Comparative Outline of Privacy Legislation” (1978) Comparative Law Yearbook vol 2, 170 Google Scholar.
165 Vedder, Anton, “Privacy 3.0” in S Van der Hof and M Groothuis (eds), Innovating Government: Normative, Policy and Technological Dimensions of Modern Government (Springer/TMC Asser Press, 2011)Google Scholar.
166 Privacy can be conceptualised in different ways, most importantly as a right “to be let alone”, limited access to the self, secrecy, control over one’s personal data, personhood (the ability to develop personal relations and make choices without undue interference), intimacy: see Solove, Daniel J, “Conceptualizing Privacy” (2002) 90 California Law Review 1087 Google Scholar.
167 Kristina Irion and Giacomo Luchetta, “Online personal data processing and the EU data protection reform”, Regulatory Policy, CEPS Task Force Reports (2013) 23.
168 Koops, Bert-Jaap, “The trouble with European data protection law” (2014) 4(4) International Data Privacy Law 250 Google Scholar. See also Kuner, Christopher, et al, “The language of data privacy law (and how it differs from reality)” (2016) 6(4) International Data Privacy Law 259.Google Scholar
169 Koops, supra, note 168, 258.
170 Kuner, Christopher, et al, “The data protection credibility crisis” (2015) 5(3) International Data Privacy Law 161 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
171 Koops, supra, note 168.
172 Hempel, L and Lammerant, H, “Impact Assessments as Negotiated Knowledge” in S Gutwirth, R Leenes, and P De Hert (eds), Reforming European Data Protection Law (Springer, 2015) 130 Google Scholar.
173 Ibid.
174 Koops, supra, note 168, 255 (“I fear that, as long as data protection is not in the hearts and minds of data controllers – and the law so far has done a poor job in reaching those hearts and minds […] – mandatory data protection impact assessments will function as paper checklists that controllers duly fill in, tick off, and file away to duly show to auditors or supervisory authorities if they ever ask for it. Procedure followed, problem solved.”)
175 Koops, supra, note 168, 254–55.
176 van Dijk, Gellert, and Rommetveit, supra, note 12, 300.
177 Gonçalves, supra, note 57, 114.
178 For a detailed review of risk definitions see Renn, Ortwin, “Concepts of Risk: A Classification” in S Krimsky and D Golding (eds), Social Theories of Risk (Praeger, 1992) 53 Google Scholar.
179 Aven, Terje and Renn, Ortwin, Risk Management and Governance: Concepts, Guidelines and Applications (Springer, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
180 Lupton, Deborah (ed), Risk and Sociocultural Theory: New Directions and Perspectives (Cambridge University Press, 2000)Google Scholar.
181 Renn, supra, note 178, 59.
182 Lupton, supra, note 180.
183 Taylor-Gooby, P and Zinn, JO (eds), Risk in Social Science (Oxford University Press, 2006)Google Scholar; Krimsky and Golding, supra, note 178; also on a cultural approach see Douglas, M and Wildavsky, AB, Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers (University of California Press, 1982)Google Scholar; Thompson, M and Wildavsky, A, “A Proposal to Create a Cultural Theory of Risk” in HC Kunrreuther and EV Ley (eds), The Risk Analysis Controversy. An Institutional Perspective (Springer, 1982) 145 Google Scholar. On system theory see Luhmann, N, Risk: a Sociological Theory (A de Gruyter, 1993)Google Scholar. On risk society see Beck, supra, note 16; Beck, U, Giddens, A and Lash, S (eds), Reflexive Modernisation: Politics, Tradition and Aesthetics in the Modern Social Order (Polity Press, 1994)Google Scholar. On the governmentality approach, see Foucault, M, “Governmentality” in G Burchell et al (eds), The Foucault Effect (Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991) 87 Google Scholar.
184 On a more detailed model of the risk continuum ranging from a realist approach offered in technico-scientific approaches to a highly relativist constructionist approach see Lupton, supra, note 180, Ch 2. On a taxonomy of sociological approaches to risk see Renn, supra, note 178, 67–72 (Renn orders sociological approaches to risk according to two dimensions: (1) individualistic versus structural; (2) objective versus constructivist. These approaches are: the rational actor concept, social mobilisation theory, organisational theory, systems theory, neo-Marxist and critical theory, and social constructionist theory).
185 Renn, supra, note 178, 72.
186 Lupton, supra, note 180, 6.
187 Proposal for a Council Directive concerning the protection of individuals in relation to the processing of personal data, COM (1990)314–2, 1990/0287/COD (“Initial Proposal”).
188 Proposal for a Council Directive concerning the protection of personal data and privacy in the context of public digital telecommunications networks, in particular the integrated services digital network (ISDN) and public digital mobile networks, COM/90/314FINAL – SYN 288, OJ C 277, 5.11.1990; Proposal for a Council Decision in the field of information security, COM/90/314FINAL, OJ C 277, 5.11.1990.
189 For example, commentary on Art 17 “Security of Processing” refers to the “potential danger to the data subject’s right to privacy” emanating from a data controller or a third party (Amended Proposal, 27).
190 Supra, note 114.
191 Luhmann, Niklas, “The morality of risk and the risk of morality” (1987)1(3) International Review of Sociology 87 Google Scholar (notes that risk refers to a possibility of negative effect attributable to one’s own decision, danger refers to the possibility of being caused harm by an external source without individual’s choice).
192 Council of the European Union, “Proposal for a regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (General Data Protection Regulation) – Risk based approach” 12267/2/14 REV 2, 2 September 2014, available at <http://register.consilium.europa.eu/doc/srv?l=EN&f=ST%2012267%202014%20REV%202> accessed 25 August 2017.
193 See also eg ISO/IEC 27002 security standard “Information technology – Security techniques – Code of practice for information security management”.
194 Ryan Calo, M, “The Boundaries of Privacy Harm” (2011) 86 Indiana LawJournal 1131 Google Scholar; Lynskey, supra, note 161, 86.
195 National Institute of Standards and Technology, “NIST Privacy Engineering Objectives and Risk Model Discussion Draft” (2014), 3. Some efforts to articulate privacy harms, however, include: Centre for Information Policy Leadership at Hunton &Williams LLP, “A Risk-based Approach to Privacy: Improving Effectiveness in Practice 2” (2014), see also Centre for Information Policy Leadership at Hunton &Williams LLP, “The Role of Risk Management in Data Protection” (2014).
196 Spina, supra, note 1, 89–90.
197 Ellen J Helsper et al, “Country Classification: Opportunities, Risks, Harm and Parental Mediation” (2013) LSE-EU Kids Online, available at <http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/52023/> accessed 30 August 2017.
198 Gellert (2015), supra, note 12.
199 ibid.
200 Lynskey, supra, note 161, 86.
201 See Harremoës, Paul et al (eds), The Precautionary Principle in the 20th Century: Late Lessons from Early Warnings (Earthscan, 2002) 22 Google Scholar.
202 Power, supra, note 16, 19.
203 Gellert (2015), supra, note 12, 16.
204 ibid 16–17. See also Stuart S Shapiro, “Situating Anonymization Within a Privacy Risk Model,” Homeland Security Systems Engineering and Development Institute (2012) 2, available at <www.mitre.org/sites/default/files/pdf/12_0353.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017, who claims that similarly in the US the Fair Information Practice Principles “encourage framing of privacy harms purely in terms of principle violations, as opposed to the actual impact on individuals.”
205 Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), “Methodology for Privacy Risk Management” (2012), available at <www.cnil.fr/fileadmin/documents/en/CNIL-ManagingPrivacyRisks-Methodology.pdf> accessed 25 August 2017; Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), “Measures for the privacy risk treatment” (2012) A Catalogue of good practices, <www.cnil.fr/fileadmin/documents/en/CNIL-ManagingPrivacyRisks-Measures.pdf> accessed 15 February 2015. See also CNIL (2015), supra, note 107.
206 Methodology for Privacy Risk Management, supra, note 205, 6.
207 Gellert (2015), supra, note 12, 17.
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