The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) (Regulation (EU) 2016/679) is a regulation by which the European Parliament, the Council of the European Union and the European Commission intend to strengthen and unify data protection for all individuals within the European Union (EU).
There are rights for people to access and control the information that companies hold about them, obligations for better data management for businesses, and a regime of fines.
In May 2018 it replaced the 1995 Data Protection Directive which UK law has been based; and remains UK law, despite Brexit.
Yes, absolutely!
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO).
There are 7 key principles, which are called Articles. These are explained in extensive detail on the ICO’s website here, but in simple language, the following applies…
Personal data is information that can be used to identify someone. Examples are:
Name / phone number / address / email address / date of birth / bank account / passport number / race / religious affiliation.
One piece alone might not identify the specific person but when connected they reveal a vivid picture of the person and their personal details.
Any incident that leads to personal data being lost, stolen, destroyed, or changed is considered a data breach. Data breaches must be reported to the ICO.
Review processes and practices. Use "The 4 ‘W’s!"
WHOSE… personal data is processed?
Consider whose data you hold. For example:
WHY… is personal data processed?
Consider why you collect, use and hold this data. For example:
WHAT… personal data is processed?
Based on whose data you hold and why you hold it, review what data you’re holding, and consider if it’s all necessary? For example:
WHEN… is personal data processed?
‘Processing’ includes the actions of obtaining, disclosing and deleting personal data. Consider the following points:
Review the data collected, who has access, and where necessary adapt:
Ensure you have a link to your policy/process document - that is explicit as to what reason you are asking for this data and how you intend to use it - available to candidates immediately prior to the option to register their details.
Consider adding a footnote to email communications each explaining why they have been sent the email, and who they should contact if they have a concern.
In the case of automated marketing communications – most usually ‘Job Alerts’ - draw attention to the fact they can unsubscribe from these alerts and provide steps on how to do this in lieu of a self-service button.
If your ATS offers a way for candidates to self-delete their personal data, activate it. If it doesn’t, or you're bound by another piece of legislation to keep it for a specific period, then implement and communicate a process for handling ad-hoc requests for data removal.
If your ATS offers an automated-archiving function, set it to the required time period and activate it.
The GDPR does not apply to data that is anonymised in such a way that an individual can no longer be identified from the information on its own, or “reconstituted” with other data to enable identification, as it is no longer "personal data".
So, check that your ATS has: