Your Data Blind Side

You might be about to see companies like Facebook, Google and many others whose business models depend on using their customers’ data, scramble in the wake of a case currently in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Thomas Robins, a Virginia man, is alleging Spokeo, Inc., a people-search website, had inaccurate (albeit more flattering) information listed about him on their site. As The Wall Street Journal noted, the lawsuit “alleges violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act, a federal law that regulates credits [sic] bureaus and sets standards over how consumer credit information is collected, stored and shared.”

Each violation of federal law can result in up to a $1,000 fine per instance. If the U.S. Supreme Court rules this violation can take class action status, this could mean violations become extremely expensive.

There’s A Bigger Problem

The bigger problem is that it’s not just social networks that collect, process and transfer people’s data. It’s every company in every industry that uses peoples’ data to better market to them, deliver better services or even provide customer support. Some of the most confounding issues for these companies are actually the result of business practices that are not in any way nefarious or annoying:

Changing Privacy Laws Are Being Applied Extraterritorially

Countries and economic areas, such as the EU, are continually crafting new laws relating to data privacy and data sovereignty. Staying on top of those ever-changing laws and adapting technology to comply with those laws is increasingly difficult. For instance, the ECJ has ruled that a person now has “the right to be forgotten,” meaning companies may be required by law to delete someone’s data if they so request. Google was recently told by the Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), France’s main data protection authority, that Google had 15 days, as of June 13, 2015, to apply the EU’s right to be forgotten laws — not just on French (.fr) sites, but all sites worldwide.

Every country around the world is starting to define and redefine laws about how they want to handle data privacy.

The British Columbia Court of Appeal in Canada similarly ordered Google to remove content from its sites globally because content violated Canadian laws. This extraterritorial application of laws has wide sweeping impact on e-commerce, privacy, defamation and freedom of information. But, what does it mean to be “forgotten?” Is it enough to be forgotten at a single point in time, but collection of data about you from that point forward is okay? What about data collection for the purposes of providing customer support? These laws are unclear and a constantly moving target.

Law Enforcement Is Getting Clearer

When it comes to issues around use of private data for law enforcement, there are some international agreements taking shape. The U.S. and the EU are in talks about a Data Protection Umbrella Agreement that “is expected to cover issues such as bulk collection of data by law enforcement agencies — which would be limited to specific purposes — as well as reduce data retention limits, and give EU citizens a right of judicial redress in the U.S. if they suspect their personal data is being misused.”

Every country around the world is starting to define and redefine laws about how they want to handle data privacy, because data privacy is no longer just a legal issue, it’s a political, technology and business issue, as well.

What Can Businesses Do?

In this arena, uniquely, technology is lagging policy. Countries are creating laws more quickly than companies can adapt their software to deal with those changes, particularly if they use big data technology or cloud environments.

Here are a few tips for what companies can do to deal with rapidly evolving data privacy laws:

This Is The New Normal

The challenges surrounding data privacy are becoming more severe as more “things” become connected to the Internet, such as our cars, homes, offices, watches and clothing. Companies collecting data about our personal devices could be sending that data all over the world. Because of this, I expect laws will become stricter, more plentiful and increasingly complicated over the next few years.

Complying with each country’s shifting laws will be a full-time job for most companies, not to mention potentially extremely costly. The old days of being able to buy, aggregate, analyze and infer data about customers without repercussions are gone. Companies need to be able to stay on top of data privacy laws and respond quickly and effectively to this rapidly changing legal environment.

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