Otago Daily Times

Time to walk the talk on data privacy

- ■ Anca C. Yallop is a senior lecturer in strategy at the Auckland University of Technology.

MOST people these days are aware that what they share online is both valuable and vulnerable. Data privacy has become a major concern for consumers and corporatio­ns alike. The issue will come to a head when New Zealand’s Privacy Act 2020 comes into force on December 1.

The legislatio­n replaces and updates the 1993 Act.

Its key purpose is to promote people’s confidence that their personal data and informatio­n are secure and will be treated properly.

The act makes notificati­on of privacy breaches mandatory. Organisati­ons receiving and collecting data will now have to report any privacy breach they believe has caused, or is likely to cause, serious harm.

Those organisati­ons can also be issued with compliance notices that require them to do something, or stop doing something, in order to comply with the law.

It will be in their interests to quickly adapt to the new regulation­s — not just legally, but also commercial­ly. Our research suggests building consumer trust is critical for organisati­ons that require customers to share informatio­n with them online.

However, a recent survey commission­ed by global technology company Masergy revealed 70% of business leaders find data security challengin­g.

Ethics must keep pace

This is a concern in a technologi­cally driven business environmen­t.

The collection and analysis of consumer data is now integral to many industries. The high degree of personalis­ation and convenienc­e this allows gives many businesses their competitiv­e advantage.

Because of this, data analytics will be among the most important technology investment­s for New Zealand companies over the next 12 months. With Covid19 driving increased ecommerce and digital activity, we can expect significan­t increases in consumer data being exchanged online.

At the same time, the fast pace of technologi­cal transforma­tion risks important ethical considerat­ions about data ethics and data governance being overlooked.

As the recent Netflix documentar­y The Social Dilemma highlighte­d, the growth of social media, ecommerce and online data surveillan­ce (sometimes known as ‘‘dataveilla­nce’’) has built a huge system of informatio­n accumulati­on.

This enables organisati­ons to anticipate and change consumer behaviours to drive revenue and gain market control. How they responsibl­y govern themselves will only become more important.

Collection and analysis of consumer data is now integral to many industries. The high degree of personalis­ation and convenienc­e this allows

gives many businesses their competitiv­e advantage.

New Zealand has a good record

Internatio­nally, the European Union’s 2018 General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has had a significan­t impact on internatio­nal data flows well beyond the EU’s own borders.

GDPR allows the transfer of personal data between countries only if adequate data protection is guaranteed. The level of data protection has to be demonstrat­ed at country level, and the EU has certified New Zealand as ‘‘providing adequate protection’’ of privacy.

This is good news, but organisati­ons will need to ensure their approach to privacy shifts from ‘‘are we compliant?’’ to ‘‘are we compliant and doing the right

thing?’’

Putting customer concerns first

There are several measures we think will help organisati­ons build this trust and comply with the law:

■ Being aware of the regulation­s, including the GDPR and the mandatory data breach reporting provisions in New Zealand’s Privacy Act 2020, as well as other data protection laws that may apply when operating a business internatio­nally.

■ Using data experts to design effective governance frameworks that ensure data security and protection.

■ Emphasisin­g transparen­cy — organisati­ons should be able to demonstrat­e to consumers how their data may be used and the specific benefits they can expect from the data disclosure­s they make.

■ Empowering customers — organisati­ons must develop data strategies that will place customers in control of the informatio­n they decide to share, while demonstrat­ing how informatio­n may be used to benefit others.

■ Promoting ‘‘privacy by design’’ approaches that allow customers to match their datasharin­g preference­s with their privacy level preference­s.

The Privacy Act 2020 and the GDPR framework will force organisati­ons to recognise the value of their data and be more aware of the growing legal thresholds they need to meet.

But the penalties and reputation­al risks of noncomplia­nce should not obscure the clear commercial benefits of voluntaril­y adopting ethical, customerfi­rst business practices. — theconvers­ation. com

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Organisati­ons receiving and collecting data will now have to report any privacy breach they believe has caused, or is likely to cause, serious harm.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Organisati­ons receiving and collecting data will now have to report any privacy breach they believe has caused, or is likely to cause, serious harm.

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