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Discover everything you need to know about the UK General Data Protection Regulation (UK GDPR) and how it impacts your business, whether you're based in the UK or targeting UK customers. Learn about key principles, data subject rights, legal bases for processing, cookie consent, privacy policies, data processing agreements, and potential penalties for non-compliance.
The UK General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) allowed the United Kingdom to be an adequate country for international data transfers after Brexit. It is the UK's version of the EU General Data Protection Regulation.
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Although the UK already had the Data Protection Act 2018 and the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulation, the "new" data protection law of the UK allowed the country to become an adequate country for free data flows across borders with the EU.
It has been in force since January 2021.
If you are familiar with the EU GDPR, you already know a lot about the UK version. Yet, we'd like to get into the details of what it requires from businesses so that you don't get into trouble with the supervisory authority.
The UK GDPR is rewritten word for word from the EU GDPR, except for the fact that the UK introduced a few exceptions to the GDPR when it comes to data processing for national security, intelligence services, and immigration purposes.
The rest of the law regulates the processing of personal data in the same way as European law.
The UK law relies on the same extraterritorial principle of the EU law, which means that the UK GDPR applies to your organisation or business if:
The UK's GDPR defines personal data as any data that can identify a person.
The UK government just took the EU definition and put it into domestic law. As a result, whatever is personal data within the EU is also personal data in the UK.
The basic principles of processing personal data under the UK GDPR are:
The same principles are embedded in the DPA 2018 as well.
The same as in the EU GDPR, the UK GDPR rights of the data subject include:
If you are familiar with EU law, you are right to assume that data subjects can submit requests at any time and receive a response within 30 days. If there is no response, penalties follow.
The UK GDPR's legal grounds for data processing are:
In most commercial cases, you'll need consent for data processing.
Cookie consent is necessary for data collection where the cookies are not essential for the functioning of the website.
Before using non-essential cookies, you must obtain consent. And the consent must be:
Also, you must allow users to withdraw it as easily as they gave it.
The EU GDPR requires the same, so if your cookie banner complies with the GDPR of the EU, it already meets the requirements of the UK regulations as well.
The privacy policy is a document in which you are transparent with your users about your privacy practices. You need to outline:
You are not limited to this information, however. This is the bare minimum needed to avoid issues with the Information Commissioner's Office, but you can always add more information.
A Data Processing Agreement (DPA) is a contract between the controller and the processor on data processing. It outlines the responsibilities of each party regarding the processing of data on behalf of the controller.
Usually, a DPA will contain written instructions on the processing, categories of data to be processed, purposes of processing, confidentiality clauses, subprocessor clauses, etc.
If you are a data processor for another company, make sure you include a DPA in all your contracts. If you are the data controller, make sure to have a written agreement with your processor.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) enforces the UK GDPR compliance.
If they take action against you and find that you have violated the law, you are under the threat of penalties of up to 4% of the annual revenue or GBP 10 million, whichever is higher.