Unlock AI Compliance: Master the new EU AI Act with our comprehensive guide.

Condividi

3 min read

Writen by Marin Milenkoski

Posted on: September 21, 2022

What is a personal data breach?

Many companies don’t take data privacy protection seriously until a data breach occurs.
A data breach is the worst nightmare that can happen to a company.
If you’ve ever faced a data breach, you will understand the difficulties that you might face without a robust protection.

ICO thoroughly explains what a personal data breach is and how you should deal with it.
According to the ICO a personal data breach means a breach of security leading to the accidental or unlawful destruction, loss, alteration, unauthorized disclosure of, or access to personal data.
This includes breaches that are the result of both accidental and deliberate causes.
It also means that a breach is more than just losing personal data.

There are three types of breaches that a company might face:

  • Confidentiality breach – when a private information is disclosed to a third party without the consent from the owner, for example emailing personal data to a wrong person.
  • Integrity breach – an unauthorized or accidental alteration of personal data, for example if a ransomware attack encrypting all data on companies’ system.
  • Availability breach – an accidental or unauthorized loss of access to, or destruction of personal data, even if temporary, for example if a server fails and the company doesn’t have access to its data.

ICO provide examples of data breaches which can be found on their website such as:

  • Access by unauthorized third party
  • Sending personal data to an incorrect recipient
  • Computing devices containing personal data being lost or stolen
  • Alteration of personal data without permission
  • Loss of availability of personal data
  • Theft of a customer database, whose data may be used to commit identity fraud
  • Loss or inappropriate alteration of a staff telephone list
  • An attack on a companies’ network that results in personal data about its clients being unlawfully accessed
  • A hospital suffers a breach that results in accidental disclosure of patient records
  • An accidental deletion of contact details

    The GDPR introduces an obligation for every company to report certain personal data breaches to their competent supervisory authority.
    For example, the Supervisory Authority in the UK is the ICO.
    The report must be made within 72 hours of becoming aware of the breach.
    If the breach is likely to result in a high risk and it’s affecting individual’s rights and freedoms, the company must inform those individuals without undue delay.
    Failing to notify the competent Supervisory Authority of a breach when required, can result in heavy fines.

    Feel free to book a slot so we can have a chat on more data privacy protection related topics.

Contatto

Hope you find this useful. If you need an EU Rep, have any GDPR questions, or have received a SAR or Regulator request and need help then please contact us anytime. We are always happy to help...
GDPR Local team.

Contatto

Recent blogs

AI in Recruitment: Balancing Innovation with GDPR Compliance


AI in recruitment is transforming the HR landscape, offering unprecedented efficiencies and imp

The Future of Finance: Adapting to AI and Data Privacy Laws

The rapidly evolving landscape of financial technology is witnessing a significant transformation w

Navigating the Contradictions: Automated Decision-Making and Regulatory Legislation in AI Systems

The Dilemma of Automated Decision-Making At the heart of AI systems lies the promise of aut

Ottieni ora il tuo account

Configurazione in pochi minuti. Inserite i dati della vostra azienda e scegliete i servizi di cui avete bisogno.

Creare un account

Entrare in contatto

Non siete sicuri di quale opzione scegliere? Chiamateci, inviateci un'e-mail, chattate con noi
in qualsiasi momento.

Contatto
06 INFO GDPR

Rimanere aggiornati

Lasciate qui i vostri dati e vi invieremo aggiornamenti e informazioni su tutti gli aspetti del GDPR e del Rappresentante dell'UE. Non vi bombarderemo di e-mail e potrete dirci di smettere in qualsiasi momento.

Il nome completo è obbligatorio!

L'e-mail aziendale è necessaria!

La compagnia è necessaria!

Si prega di accettare i termini e le condizioni e l'informativa sulla privacy