A new year is upon us, and with it will come major changes in
how organizations handle personal data. Of course, this is not the
first time we've seen significant changes:
- 2018 brought enormous changes to Europe as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) became effective;
- 2020 brought major changes to the U.S. as the California Consumer Privacy Act became effective; and
- 2021 ushered in massive change in China with the introduction of the Personal Information Privacy Law and the Cyber Security Law.
Rather than list all of the many new personal data protection laws coming into effect in 2023, I would like to offer some high-level thoughts about personal data risk in 2023 that organizations should consider:
- Overall, privacy risk is trending strongly upwards, as a result of more complex and strict privacy laws. Accordingly, past experience is a poor indicator of future results.
The likelihood and severity of a privacy
violation cannot be predicted using historical data alone.
Therefore, many common risk quantification models will be insufficient
to predict privacy risk.
- It is becoming more difficult to assess risk globally. Fines and settlements are based on a variety of factors that differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. An activity can be lower risk in one jurisdiction and higher risk in
another. Global organizations need to understand the risk environment
in every country in which they operate. In the past, it may have been acceptable to simply apply GDPR as a global standard, but it is probably not wise
to take such a simplified approach in the future.
- Many jurisdictions utilize an enforcement model focused on deterrence
rather than consistent application. Given limited enforcement
resources, they aim for a small number of very large fines which will
act as a deterrent rather than aiming to catch all violations and punish
them proportionately to the harm they cause. Therefore, plenty of
companies will "get away with" privacy violations, which may create a
false sense of security. Those who are targeted for enforcement are
likely to be punished quite severely.
- As many
companies--especially consumer-facing companies--continue to pursue
digital transformations, they are adding more and more technologies and third party data custodians. This creates internal complexity and an
ever-expanding personal data environment. An expanding personal data
environment requires more and more resources to govern effectively, and
at some point can become unsustainable. Organizations should apply a
rigorous process to their digital transformations that ensure that
older technologies and third party data custodians are retired as rapidly as new
technologies and third party data custodians are onboarded. This means
explicitly acknowledging tradeoffs and making hard choices.
- As
organizations pursue agility and decentralization, they are granting
more autonomy to individual business units to make decisions closer to
the "front lines." This can be a smart management strategy. However,
organizations should know that personal data privacy risk cannot be limited to a business unit.
If one business unit creates a privacy violation, the laws increasingly
hold the entire organization (meaning the top-level parent organization
and all affiliated entities) responsible, and fines are often based on
the global revenue of the entire global enterprise. For example, if a
small division of a small local subsidiary violates the GDPR or China's
PIPL, the result could be a massive fine equal to 4-5% of the entire
global revenue of all affiliated companies. Similarly, cyberinsurance
underwriters consider risk holistically, and a poor practice by one
small division can affect the insurability of an entire enterprise.
Finally, reputational risks often cannot be limited to a single brand or
business unit of the organization. Media reports have tended to name
the parent organization or affiliated brands in negative press coverage,
even when the privacy violation was committed by only one small
division of the company. Accordingly, organizations probably should not
allow small divisions to take on risk that could threaten the entire
enterprise.
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