Why you need GDPR Representation
- Acts as the point of contact for data subjects and supervisory authorities; and
- Enables supervisory authorities to pursue enforcement actions within the territories
Now that the UK has left the EU, the following rules apply:
- Organisations without a presence in the UK and the EEA need separate representatives in both territories
- UK organisations need a Representative in the EEA
- EEA organisations need a Representative in the UK
WHAT THE GDPR REQUIRES OF A REPRESENTATIVE
Responsibilities
The Representative is required to:
- Co-operate with the supervisory authorities
- Facilitate communication between data subjects and your organisation
- Be readily accessible to data subjects in all relevant member states
- Maintain a Record of Processing Activities (RoPA) in accordance with Article 30 of the GDPR
Supervisory authorities can pursue enforcement actions through the Representative for the noncompliance of the organisation they represent
The Position
The Representative:
- Is appointed to represent data controllers or processors that are not established in the EU and/or the UK
- Must be established in one of the member states where the controller or processor’s data subjects reside
- Can be subject to enforcement proceedings for non-compliance by the controller or processor
The Representative can be a person or company, but with a lead contact assigned
The Representative appears on your privacy policy as the contact for EU data subjects and regulators
YOUR GDPR REPRESENTATIVE SHOULD WORK WITH YOU TO:
Set up your GDPR Representation
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Ensure your privacy policy displays the Representative’s contact details
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Understand your dataflows
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Review previous gap analysis and impact assessments
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Ensure adequate security measures are being taken to protect EU and UK residents’ data
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Be aware of any previous breaches or non-compliance
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Establish a copy of your Records of Processing Activities (RoPA)
Provide ongoing GDPR Representation
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Maintain and update your RoPA on an ongoing basis
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Translate and respond to queries from European and UK data protection authorities and data subjects
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Log and (where appropriate) report breaches
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Receive and log data subject rights requests and advise on suitable responses
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Advise on data protection regulatory issues that impact your organisation