Personal Data & Controller-Processor Relationship Flashcards

Master the definitions of personal data and the legal responsibilities of controllers and processors under the GDPR. (55 cards)

1
Q

What is joint controllership?

A

When two or more entities jointly determine the purposes and means of processing.

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2
Q

What is a converging decision in joint controllership?

A

Independent but complementary decisions that are inextricably linked and necessary for the processing.

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3
Q

What is the significance of the Fashion ID case?

A

It demonstrated joint controllership.

Concerned the integration of a social media plug-in where both retailer and platform influenced data processing.

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4
Q

What factors determine joint controllership?

A
  • Joint decisions on purposes and means
  • Factual influence
  • Type of participation
  • Decisive influence
  • Allocation of duties
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5
Q

What is a best practice for identifying joint controllership?

A
  • Identify project stages
  • Determine which stages require joint determinations
  • Clarify responsibility allocations
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6
Q

What is the definition of personal data under the GDPR?

A

Any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person.

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7
Q

What are the 4 parts of the definition of personal data according to WP29 Opinion 4/2007?

A
  1. Any information
  2. Relating to
  3. An identified or identifiable
  4. Natural person
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8
Q

What are the 3 features used to determine if information is personal data?

A
  1. Nature
  2. Content
  3. Format
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9
Q

What types of statements fall under ‘Nature’ in personal data analysis?

A
  1. Objective
  2. Subjective

Objective: e.g., education, experience

Subjective: e.g., work quality, collegiality

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10
Q

What types of information constitute ‘Content’ in the context of personal data?

A

Private life and public/professional activities

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11
Q

What does ‘Format’ include under the definition of personal data?

A

Any form, whether processed by automated means or manually in a filing system.

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12
Q

What qualifies as ‘automated means’ in data processing?

A

Systems that operate automatically without human intervention.

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13
Q

What is a ‘filing system’ under GDPR?

A

A structured set of personal data accessible by specific criteria, such as alphabetical or numeric order.

Examples: employee files, medical records, customer orders, student records

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14
Q

What does ‘relating to’ mean in the context of personal data?

A

It involves linkability between the data and the individual based on context.

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15
Q

According to WP29 Opinion 4/2007, what are the 3 ways data can relate to a person?

A
  1. Content
  2. Purpose
  3. Result
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16
Q

What does the ‘Content’ criterion mean?

A

Data is inherently about or describes an individual.

E.g., medical report or passport

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17
Q

What does the ‘Purpose’ criterion mean?

A

Data is used or intended to evaluate, treat, or affect a person, even if not inherently about them.

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18
Q

What does the ‘Result’ criterion mean?

A

Processing affects a person’s rights, interests, or status.

E.g., through fleet tracking or surveillance

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19
Q

Does the GDPR apply to anonymized data?

A

No, as long as all personal identifiers have been removed.

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20
Q

Does the GDPR apply to pseudonymized data?

A

Yes, even though direct identifiers are removed.

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21
Q

What is pseudonymization?

A

A process that removes direct identifiers and keeps them separate to prevent re-identification.

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22
Q

What is aggregation in the context of data?

A

Combining and summarizing data from multiple sources into a high-level format.

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23
Q

Does the GDPR define the term ‘natural person’?

A

No, the definition is left to member states.

24
Q

According to Recital 27, does the GDPR apply to deceased persons?

25
What types of personal data are considered **sensitive** under GDPR?
* Race * Ethnicity * Political opinions * Religious or philosophical beliefs * Trade union membership * Genetic data * Biometric data * Health data * Sexuality
26
What is **genetic data**?
Data related to **inherited or acquired genetic characteristics** that provide unique information about a person’s physiology or health.
27
What is **health data** under the GDPR?
Data **related to physical or mental health**, including medical history, health care services, and health status across time.
28
What is **biometric data**?
Data resulting from **technical processing** of **physical, physiological, or behavioral characteristics** using technology. ## Footnote Examples: fingerprints, facial geometry, iris scans, voiceprints, typing rhythm, gait, signature
29
What is the **role** of a **data controller**?
**Determines the purpose and means** of processing and is responsible for GDPR compliance.
30
Who can be a **data controller**?
1. A natural or legal person 2. Public authority 3. Agency, or other body
31
What are some **obligations** of a **data controller**?
* Inform data subjects of data processing activities * Determine legal basis for processing * Honor data subject rights * Conduct DPIAs * Ensure security * Notify relevant parties after a breach
32
What is a **data processor**?
An entity that processes personal data **on behalf of a controller**.
33
Who is the primary **target for enforcement** under GDPR?
The data controller
34
What are the **5 parts** of the **controller definition**?
1. Natural or legal person, public authority, agency, or other body 2. Determines 3. Alone or jointly 4. The purposes and means 5. Of processing data
35
What distinguishes a **natural person** from a **legal person**?
* A natural person is a **human** * A legal person is an **organization**
36
What does '**determines**' mean in the controller context?
**Having the ultimate say** in why and how personal data is processed, regardless of contracts.
37
Can a processor **become** a controller?
**Yes**, if they **independently decide** why and how data is processed.
38
Can **multiple entities** act as controllers?
**Yes**, if they make decisions collectively, they are **joint controllers**.
39
What does '**purpose**' refer to in data processing?
The intended **goal of processing**. ## Footnote E.g., billing, legal services, shipping
40
What does '**means**' refer to in data processing?
The **methods and operations performed** on personal data throughout its lifecycle.
41
What are **essential means** in processing?
Decisions **closely linked to purpose and scope** of processing. ## Footnote E.g., type of data collected, duration of collection, recipients of collected data
42
What are **non-essential** means in processing?
Practical/technical decisions ## Footnote E.g., software choice, internal staff assignments, security tools
43
**Who decides** essential vs. non-essential means?
* Controllers decide essential means * Processors may determine non-essential means if not contradictory
44
Can processing involve **multiple parties**?
**Yes**, different operators may be involved at different stages and activities.
45
What are the **2 key features** of a data processor?
* Be a **distinct legal entity** from the controller and * Process data **on behalf** of the controller
46
What entities are **not considered processors**?
* Departments within a controller * Individuals under direct authority
47
Is the processor vs. controller distinction **organization-wide**?
No ## Footnote It is **activity-specific** and **context-specific**.
48
Can an entity be **both** a processor and a controller?
**Yes**, for different processing activities and data sets.
49
When does a processor **become a controller**?
When it **uses data for its own purposes**. ## Footnote Example: marketing its services using controller-provided data
50
What must controller-processor relationships **be based on**?
A **contract** or other binding legal document.
51
What must be **explicitly stated** in a controller-processor **contract**?
* Nature and purpose of processing * Types of personal data * Categories of data subjects
52
What must **processors** do at the **end of the contract**?
**Delete or return** all personal data to the controller.
53
What are general vs. specific **subcontracting authorizations**?
* **General**: controller may object and set selection criteria * **Specific**: individual approval for each subcontractor
54
What is the definition of **processing** under GDPR?
**Any operation** performed on personal data. ## Footnote E.g., collection, recording, storage, use, disclosure, erasure, etc., whether or not by automated means
55
According to Recital 14, **who does the GDPR apply to**?
Any natural person **regardless of** nationality or place of residence.