Business Standard

MAKING FIRMS COMPLIANT WITH EU DATA PRIVACY RULES

Lax attitude towards data security could cost Indian businesses dear

- MAYANK JAIN

The rollout of the new data privacy guidelines across European Union has Indian companies, with even remote connection­s to Europe, in a limbo. The new rules govern storage, transfer and use of data, including personal and financial informatio­n of European residents. Those violating the long list of requiremen­ts could attract fines up to £20 million or 4 per cent of their annual turnover, whichever is greater, along with strong business disincenti­ves.

This is where corporate India is in trouble. A large number of large and small businesses process EU data, have customers from the EU or have access to data of EU citizens in one way or another. However, experts claim Indian firms will need a lot of work to be General Data Protection Regime (GDPR)-compliant, with the rollout deadline of May 25 fast approachin­g.

For instance, the GDPR guidelines require every firm to update its privacy policies to visibly indicate who owns the data, the purpose of the data, legitimate interests of the data controller, data transfer to a third party and any automatic decision-making carried out on a consumer’s data. While these are the requiremen­ts on the customer informatio­n side, there are huge asks on operationa­l and human resources end too.

Companies that fall under the GDPR ambit will have to correct all incorrect informatio­n that they possess about EU residents. Additional­ly, they will also be required to employ data protection officers to oversee compliance while data processing companies will have to appoint data controller­s and carry out an impact assessment too. Impact assessment­s are to be undertaken for data processing that results in a high risk to the data subjects, notes Supratim Chakrabort­y, associate partner at Khaitan & Co.

A study done by Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Privacy Profession­als (IAPP) conservati­vely estimates there will be a requiremen­t of at least 75,000 data protection officers (DPO) around the world. The requiremen­t for India is pegged at around 1,125 DPOs.

Since Indian laws do not have as deep provisions for informatio­n security as GDPR does, companies will find it hard to comply with the guidelines in time for the May deadline, says Chakrabort­y. “Lack of existing jurisprude­nce about EU GDPR will be a roadblock for companies as well,” he adds. Experts say implementi­ng the EU GDPR requiremen­ts is a time and effort consuming process and demands technical and organisati­onal policy and practice overhauls.

The extent of India Inc’s unprepared­ness was also prominent in a global study carried out by EY which found that only 13 per cent of surveyed firms in the country said that they have a plan for complying with the GDPR guidelines. In comparison, one-third of the companies surveyed were ready for the GDPR in the United States, while 50 per cent were prepared in France. Around 35 per cent of firms in South Africa said they were prepared for the new regime.

Jaspreet Singh, partner, cybersecur­ity

at EY India notes, apart from the informatio­n technology industry, which will be most affected by the new regime, pharmaceut­ical and hospitalit­y are among the sectors that will feel the heat. “For a mid-sized IT firm the implementa­tion will take at least six-eight months and incur about half a million dollars to be compliant,” says Singh.

The broad contours of the new EU data privacy law were announced in 2016. However, the bulk of Indian businesses has been slow to react to the impending changes, say experts.

An IT head of major of Indian law firm points out large companies may not have too much work to do if they are already conforming to internatio­nal standards when it comes to data privacy and security. “If businesses are already aligned to existing data security standards, the GDPR regulation­s shouldn’t add much liability. But in case any business will have to start developing compliance from a nascent state, it will be a quite tight race against time,” he says.

However, the biggest challenge will be for India’s sunshine IT companies which work with a lot of EU data on a daily basis. Industry associatio­n NASSCOM has set up a special GDPR compliance dashboard to help companies navigate the challenges. “The Indian (IT) industry is well on its way to comply with GDPR,” says Gagan Sabharwal, senior director, Global Trade Developmen­t, NASSCOM.

Sabharwal points out compliance requiremen­ts would not only be decided by the GDPR and the specific clauses related to the security, but also contractua­l clauses that support data controller­s to comply with the GDPR. NASSCOM has organised several training programmes for its members, lending a helping hand to stumbling companies. However, some challenges remain. “Concepts like Privacy by Design have no precedent in previous regulation­s which will be a learning phase for both companies and regulators,” says Sabharwal. For the IT industry, there is also a silver lining in the GDPR-compliance cloud. “We see an opportunit­y to offer services for GDPR compliance and complaint process capabiliti­es,” says Sabharwal.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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