Privacy Act review to examine privacy tort, direct action rights, and GDPR 
compliance

The Attorney-General's Department will look at carve-outs, harmonisation with 
states and other nations, and a right to erase for Australians.

By Chris Duckett | October 30, 2020 -- 06:19 GMT (17:19 AEDT) | Topic: Security
https://www.zdnet.com/article/privacy-act-review-to-examine-privacy-tort-direct-action-rights-and-gdpr-compliance


Australia's Attorney-General Christian Porter announced on Friday the terms of 
reference and issues paper that his department will use as a basis for its 
review of the Privacy Act.

The wide-ranging review will consider the definition of personal information; 
whether existing exemptions for small businesses, political parties, and the 
storing of employee records to comply with the Act should remain; whether 
individuals should gain the power to drag privacy violators to court; and 
whether a privacy tort should be created.

The review was agreed to as part of the Commonwealth's response to the 
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's (ACCC) Digital Platforms 
Inquiry.

In posing 67 questions for submissions to respond to, the Attorney-General's 
Department (AGD) has asked whether the definition of personal information 
should be extended to inferred personal information as well as whether 
additional protections should be extended to de-identified, anonymised, and 
pseudonymised information.

Of particular interest in the paper was the failure of Australian privacy laws 
to be compatible with those in Europe, especially the General Data Protection 
Regulation (GDPR), with exemptions created in the Australian law two decades 
ago being a roadblock.

"The [Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC)] noted that no other comparable 
jurisdiction (the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Canada, and the European Union) 
exempts small businesses from the general privacy law," the paper said.

"The Senate Committee inquiry further recommended the removal of the exemption 
given the privacy regimes in overseas jurisdictions have operated effectively 
without a small business exemption and that the existence of the exemption was 
one of the key outstanding issues preventing Australia from seeking adequacy 
with the EU.

"[The ALRC] also noted that the United Kingdom does not exempt employee records 
and that removing the exemption may facilitate recognition of the adequacy of 
Australian privacy law by the EU."

On the flip side, the paper pointed out that only UK and Germany were in 
Australia's top 15 two-way trading partners while other economies around the 
Asia-Pacific made up 72% of trade. The EU only accounted for 13.5%.

"As less trade is undertaken with the EU than within the APEC region, the 
government's recent priority has been to ensure adequate privacy protections 
within and between APEC economies," the AGD said.

"Requiring businesses to comply with different information handling 
requirements under the Act, [Cross-Border Privacy Rules] and GDPR could result 
in a regulatory landscape that is overly complex. On the other hand, compliance 
with the GDPR may give businesses a competitive advantage in engendering 
consumer trust."

Currently in Australia, if a business has revenue under AU$3 million, it is 
exempt from the Act, and the paper wrestled with the idea of whether a 
threshold should remain, and if so, what should it be since businesses under 
that threshold could handle sensitive personal information yet maintaining the 
threshold could increase compliance costs for those businesses.

Leaning on the ACCC's recommendations, the paper raised the prospect of 
requiring organisations requesting personal data to implement defaults to make 
collection of information opt-in. It also asked whether individuals should be 
made to consent for each purpose and time their information is collected and 
whether the core concept of consent was effective.

The paper also asked whether there should be higher requirements to destroy or 
de-identify personal information that is held by organisations and whether 
Australia should have a "right to erasure", which would be an analogue to 
Europe's right to be forgotten.

The potential of handing Australians the power to initiate court action to seek 
compensation from privacy breaches was also raised -- Australians currently can 
only directly apply for an injunction -- and questions on how to stop the 
courts being filled with actions over "trivial breaches", such as funnelling 
complaints via the Office of the Information Commissioner for conciliation or 
capping damages, were also asked.

The paper also discussed the idea of whether a statutory tort of privacy was 
needed, with the AGD saying it would allow for privacy breaches not covered by 
the Privacy Act to be caught, but also that recent criminal legislation may 
lower the need for such a tort.

"A key issue for the design of a statutory tort of privacy is the types of 
liability it would cover. That is, liability based on intention, liability 
based on negligence or strict liability," the AGD said.

"The ALRC recommended that a statutory tort should be confined to intentional 
or reckless invasions of privacy and should not extend to negligent invasions 
of privacy or attract strict liability. However, it is questionable that an 
invasion of privacy due to gross negligence where a person may not have been 
reckless but failed to exercise even the slightest degree of care and diligence 
in relation to an obvious risk should be outside scope."

The terms of reference also stated the review would not look into any changes 
to the Privacy Act that were made to cater for the government's COVIDSafe app, 
nor recent changes made to credit reporting.

Submissions to the review have a deadline of November 29, with a discussion 
paper set to appear early next year. A date for the final report was not 
specified.

"Australians are spending more and more of their time online and more of their 
personal information is being collected, handled and stored," Porter said.

"Technology is also rapidly evolving in areas such as artificial intelligence 
and data analytics, which is why it is crucial that we have a privacy regime 
that is fit for purpose, can grow trust, empower consumers, and support the 
growing digital economy."

The review will also examine the effectiveness of the Notifiable Data Breaches 
scheme.

"The NDB Scheme commenced on 22 February 2018. There are therefore some 
difficulties in determining at this stage whether the scheme has achieved its 
long term objectives," the AGD said.

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