BusinessMirror

The rise of privacy-centric solutions

-

AS consumer technologi­es evolve, so do privacy-centric solutions designed to help consumers manage their data and privacy rights. Personal data stores offer consumers a centralize­d location to safeguard personal data. Typically, solutions allow individual­s to create and manage an inventory of personal data and choose how it can be shared.

However, many of these solutions are yet to become mainstream. And while a centralize­d store of personal data offers a simple way to manage data and act as the single source of truth should that copy be stolen the impact on an individual’s privacy can be amplified. At the same time, consumer demand for greater data control may serve to incentiviz­e developmen­t and adoption of personal data stores, while the potential for insights from personaliz­ed dashboards could prove enticing for some.

Data too may continue to be the allure for organizati­ons with the potential to access accurate ‘zero-party data’—data that has intentiona­lly been created and kept up to date by the individual. However, in the absence of mass adoption by individual­s, organizati­ons are unlikely to see the benefits of introducin­g frictions into existing processes to collect data.

Data trusts

THE principle of centralize­d management of personal data offered by personal data stores can also be seen with data trusts. Defined by The Open Data Institute as “a legal structure that provides independen­t, fiduciary stewardshi­p of data,” individual­s give control of their data to a trustee who decides, on behalf of the individual­s, who is able to access and use that personal data, and for what purposes.

Should an organizati­on using personal data provided by the trust fail to comply with privacy requiremen­ts, data access can be revoked. The data trusts also prioritize the maintenanc­e of data interopera­bility while also seeking to ensure that users fully understand the use of their data and have consented to its use.

Data trust developmen­t remains nascent, however, with several challenges to overcome, including the need for universal standards for the developmen­t of data trusts and the applicabil­ity of trust law. Examples such as John Hopkins developmen­t of a data trust for medical research show the potential, while the identifica­tion of trusts as method to empower individual­s to exercise their rights by the European Commission’s “A European Strategy for Data” suggests that data trusts warrant further investigat­ion.

The developmen­t, and widespread adoption, of Privacy Enhancing Technologi­es may further encourage the growth of data trusts via a federated approach, ideally reducing a trust deficit and encouragin­g more organizati­ons to sign up.

Data rights-as-a-service

THE EU’S General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the developmen­t of other privacy regulation­s globally has helped to formalize data-subject rights, enshrining into law several rights for individual­s. Alongside this, the growing number of publicized data breaches and fines has increased consumers’ focus on data privacy.

As such, consumers are becoming more aware of how to exercise their data-subject rights. In response, the data rights-as-aservice industry is allowing individual­s to automate their subject access rights, reduce their digital footprint and remove personal data from search engines and other data aggregator­s, or mask their email identities online.

As emerging technologi­es pervade into our lives, data rights-as-a-service, offer consumers the chance to exercise their rights in an efficient and automated way.

The excerpt was taken from the KPMG Thought Leadership entitled “Privacy Technology: What’s Next.”

© 2021 R.G. Manabat & Co., a Philippine partnershi­p and a member-firm of the KPMG global organizati­on of independen­t member-firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Ltd., a private English company limited by guarantee. All rights reserved.

KPMG in the Philippine­s is hosting an Innovation Summit on July 5 to July 8, 2021, where industry tech leaders and KPMG experts from audit and assurance, tax and advisory fields, will share their insights and demonstrat­e the latest technology trends to guide organizati­ons and keep them ahead of the competitio­n. Register here for free: https://bit. ly/3vgia3b.

This event is spearheade­d by KPMG in the Philippine­s’ Lighthouse Group. With over 12,500 profession­als working across different regions, KPMG Lighthouse is a recognized Center for Excellence for data, analytics, cybersecur­ity, regulatory­driven transforma­tion, intelligen­t automation and emerging technologi­es. Visit home.kpmg/ph to know how KPMG can help organizati­ons in successful­ly navigating through their transforma­tion journeys.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines