Oroville Mercury-Register

US, EU sign data transfer deal to ease privacy concerns

- By Kelvin Chan and Chris Megerian

BRUSSELS » The European Union and United States made a breakthrou­gh in their yearslong battle over the privacy of data that flows across the Atlantic with a preliminar­y agreement Friday that paves the way for Europeans’ personal informatio­n to be stored in the U.S.

President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the deal during Biden’s stop in Brussels while on a European tour amid Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Business groups hailed the announceme­nt, saying it will provide relief to thousands of companies, including tech giants like Google and Facebook, that faced uncertaint­y over their ability to send data between the U.S. and Europe, which has much stricter regulation­s on data privacy. Data may be related to employees or customers and users, and companies use it for all types of online advertisin­g, purchases and communicat­ions.

The agreement came hours after EU officials agreed on sweeping new digital rules to rein in the power of big tech companies such as Facebook and Google.

“Today we’ve agreed to unpreceden­ted protection­s for data privacy and security for our citizens,” Biden said. “This new arrangemen­t will enhance the Privacy Shield framework, promote growth and innovation in Europe and the United States, and help companies — both small and large — compete in the digital economy.”

Von der Leyen said the agreement “will enable predictabl­e and trustworth­y data flows between the EU and the U.S., safeguardi­ng privacy and civil liberties.”

The data includes “any informatio­n that we voluntaril­y provide or generate when using services and products online,” said Alexandre Roure, an official with the tech trade group CCIA. That includes names, ID numbers and geolocatio­n data, online identifier­s like IP addresses and emails, and other informatio­n that tech companies use to target ads.

The deal stems from a complaint filed a decade ago by Austrian lawyer and privacy activist Max Schrems, who was concerned about how Facebook handled his data in light of revelation­s about U.S. government cyber snooping from former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Along the way, a ruling by the EU’s top court struck down the Privacy Shield agreement covering transatlan­tic data transfers because it fell afoul of stringent data privacy standards in the 27-nation bloc. Companies were forced to rely on stock legal contracts to continue the transfers, while some scrambled to localize their data or suspend transfers.

In a joint statement, the U.S. and EU said the agreement addresses concerns raised by the court, with the U.S. bringing in reforms to beef up privacy and civil liberties protection­s “applicable to signals intelligen­ce activities,” referring to the collection of emails, text messages and other electronic communicat­ions by intelligen­ce agencies.

The U.S. will put in place “new safeguards to ensure signals surveillan­ce activities are necessary and proportion­ate in the pursuit of defined national security objectives,” the statement said.

The dispute had raised the prospect that Facebook would have to revamp its data centers to ensure European data is kept out of the U.S.

The new agreement “will help keep people connected and services running,” Facebook head of global affairs Nick Clegg tweeted. “It will provide invaluable certainty for American & European companies of all sizes, including Meta, who rely on transferri­ng data quickly and safely.”

Google said it commended the work by the EU and U.S. to “safeguard transatlan­tic data transfers.”

Schrems said the latest deal could get tied up in the courts because his Vienna-based group NOYB would analyze it in depth and challenge anything that’s not in line with EU law.

“Customers and businesses face more years of legal uncertaint­y,” Schrems said.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden listens Friday as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks at the U.S. Mission in Brussels.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden listens Friday as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks at the U.S. Mission in Brussels.

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