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Knowledge Highlights 27 January 2025
From 14 May 2020 to 28 May 2020, the Ministry of Communications and Information (“MCI”) and the Personal Data Protection Commission (“PDPC”) are conducting an online public consultation to seek feedback on the draft Personal Data Protection (Amendment) Bill 2020 (“PDP Bill”), which proposes amendments to the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (“PDPA”) and related amendments to the Spam Control Act (“SCA”). The consultation builds upon the previous three public consultations conducted by MCI/PDPC between 2017 and 2019.
The proposed amendments cover the following four key areas:
These amendments seek to ensure that the PDPA keeps pace with technological advances, new business practices, and global legislative developments relating to the protection of personal data, by strengthening the accountability of and building public trust in organisations which collect, use and/or disclose personal data. In particular, the PDP Bill will introduce enhanced financial penalties for breaches of the PDPA, a mandatory breach notification requirement, as well as a data portability obligation on organisations.
Set out below is a summary of some of the proposed changes.
1. Strengthening accountability of organisations
(i) Organisations will be required to inform PDPC and affected individuals if a data breach occurs that results in, or is likely to result, in significant harm to the individuals whose data has been affected by the data breach. PDPC will prescribe categories of data, such as drivers’ licence numbers, NRIC numbers, credit card numbers, etc., which if compromised would likely result in “significant harm” to individuals.
(ii) Organisations will be required to inform PDPC if a data breach is of a significant scale. PDPC has noted that breaches affecting 500 or more individuals would be an appropriate numerical threshold.
Once an organisation has credible grounds to believe that a data breach has occurred, it must take reasonable and expeditious steps to assess whether the data breach meets the criteria for notification. An organisation must document the steps taken to demonstrate that it has acted reasonably and expeditiously, and carried out the assessment in good faith.
If the criteria for notification are met, the organisation must notify (i) all affected individuals as soon as practicable, and (ii) PDPC as soon as practicable, no later than three calendar days after the organisation determines that the breach meets the notification criteria.
The PDP Bill will also introduce exceptions to the mandatory data breach notification requirement. These would include situations where circumstances are such that significant harm is unlikely to occur, e.g. remedial action has been taken by the organisation or technological safeguards are present, or where organisations are instructed by law enforcement agencies or PDPC not to notify individuals.
2. Enabling meaningful consent for collection, use and disclosure of personal data
(i) the collection, use or disclosure of personal data is reasonably necessary to conclude or perform a contract or transaction; or
(ii) individuals have been notified of the purpose of the intended collection, use or disclosure of his/her personal data, are given a reasonable opportunity to opt out, and have not opted out.
(i) Organisations will be able to collect, use or disclose personal data for where it is in the legitimate interests of the organisation, and the benefit to the public is greater than any adverse effect on individuals. This would include detecting or preventing illegal activity such as fraud or money laundering, threats to physical safety and security, preventing misuse of services etc.
(ii) Organisations will be able to use personal data collected for the purposes of business improvement e.g. operational efficiency and service, developing products/services etc. The use of data for business improvement is pegged to what a reasonable person would consider appropriate in the circumstances.
3. Providing greater consumer autonomy over personal data
(i) A “whitelist” of data categories to which the obligation would apply;
(ii) Technical and procedural details to ensure that data is correctly and safely transmitted to receiving organisations in a usable form
(iii) Relevant data porting request models, e.g. a push model (where consumers make the porting request to the organisation giving the data), or a pull model (where consumers make the porting request to the organisation receiving the data);
(iv) Safeguards for individuals e.g. cooling off periods for individuals to withdraw a porting request if they change their mind, blacklists of organisations, etc.
4. Strengthening effectiveness of PDPC enforcement efforts
Submission of feedback
The public consultation document and procedures for submission of feedback are available on MCI’s website www.mci.gov.sg from 14 May 2020.
The proposed changes, especially those relating to financial penalties, are significant. We would be pleased to discuss with you the full impact and ramifications that arise from the consultation and the proposed PDP Bill.
If you have any comments on the proposed amendments, or require assistance to submit comments or recommendations, our Contact Partners would also be pleased to assist you in providing feedback. Please note that the deadline for providing feedback to MCI/PDPC is 28 May 2020.
Reference materials
The following materials are available on the MCI website www.mci.gov.sg: