Data Protection Act 2018
The Data Protection Act 2018 (c. 12) is a United Kingdom act of Parliament (UK) which updates data protection laws in the UK. It is a national law which complements the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and replaces the Data Protection Act 1998. The act was to be significantly amended by the Data Protection and Digital Information Bill. However, that bill was abandoned due to the 2024 United Kingdom general election.[1] BackgroundThe Data Protection Bill was introduced to the House of Lords by Lord Ashton of Hyde, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport on 13 September 2017.[2] The Data Protection Act 2018 received royal assent on 23 May 2018. The Act came into effect on 25 May 2018. It was amended on 1 January 2021 by regulations under the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, to reflect the UK's status outside the EU. It replaces the Data Protection Act 1998.[3] The Act applies the data protection standards set out in the GDPR and, where the GDPR allows EU member states to make different choices for its implementation in their country, defines those choices for the UK.[4] ContentsThe Act has seven parts. These are outlined in Section 1:[5]
The Act introduces new offences that include knowingly or recklessly obtaining or disclosing personal data without the consent-giving of the data controller, procuring such disclosure, or retaining the data obtained without consent. Selling, or offering to sell, personal data knowingly or recklessly obtained or disclosed would also be an offence.[6] Essentially, the Act implements the EU Law Enforcement Directive,[7] it implements those parts of the GDPR which "are to be determined by Member State law" and it creates a framework similar to the GDPR for the processing of personal data which is outside the scope of the GDPR. This includes intelligence services processing, immigration services processing and the processing of personal data held in unstructured form by public authorities. Under section 3 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018,[8] the GDPR will be incorporated directly into domestic law immediately after the UK exits the European Union. The enforcement of the Act by the Information Commissioner's Office is supported by a data protection charge on UK data controllers under the Data Protection (Charges and Information) Regulations 2018. Exemptions from the charge were left broadly the same as for 1998 Act: largely some businesses and non-profits internal core purposes (staff or members, marketing and accounting), household affairs, some public purposes, and non-automated processing.[9][10] Under the 2018 Act, the enforcement regime for registration changed from criminal to civil monetary penalties.[11] The Act introduces a new public interest test applicable to the research processing of personal health data.[12] The Act gave people the right to apply to courts and tribunals for different orders, including: in the tribunal by ordering the Information Commissioner to conduct an investigation (section 166); in the court for compliance orders against the Commissioner or controllers or processors (section 167); in the tribunal against penalty notices and other enforcement decisions (section 162). The jurisdiction of these sections and their extent and limits have been the subject of a campaign of litigation arguing their different extent and limits, including as high as the Court of Appeal.[13][14][15][16] AdditionsThe Data Protection Act 2018 is a revision of the Data Protection Act 1998 which includes the importance of organizations to be more responsible with the information as well as improving the confidentiality.[17] The latter revision also works in tandem with the GDPR, which the Data Protection Act 1998 didn't do.[18] From the Data Protection Act 1998 to the Data Protection Act 2018, the key additions are the following:[17]
The revision allowed the law makers to add the ability to erase any data if the individual chooses to and this is based on the premise of the basic right to privacy.[17] The 2018 version allowed people to get a clear interpretation of the exemptions of the act, which was unclear in the 1998 version.[18] When the Data Protection Act 1998 was being made, the GDPR did not exist, thus there was no law for the DPA to work with.[clarification needed] Eventually, with the creation of the GDPR, the DPA was updated to work in tandem.[19] References
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