GDPR: The EU Data Protection Law

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their ‘Personally Identifiable Information’ (PII) is being used online. PII, as described in US privacy law and information security, is information that can be used on its own or with other information to identify, contact, or locate a single person, or to identify an individual in context. Please read our privacy policy carefully to get a clear understanding of how we collect, use, protect or otherwise handle your Personally Identifiable Information in accordance with our website.

Overview

Learn about obligations under the GDPR, and how LEX247 is designed to help you achieve GDPR compliance.

LEX247 has always made security and privacy among its highest priorities. That’s why we’ve committed not only to provide tools to facilitate your compliance with the GDPR, but to educate you on your responsibilities as a business owner. As the GDPR’s scope is broad, and the potential penalties for noncompliance are large, we’ve ensured that our tools are available to all of our customers, at no additional cost.

This page will outline some of the key GDPR principles and terms and present how they apply to your use of LEX247. Please review this carefully and share it with your privacy team with the legal documents listed below.

Disclaimer: This guide is not and should not be considered legal advice. Please consult a legal professional for details on how the GDPR may impact your legal practice or business, and what you need for compliance.

General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”)

The GDPR is a unified regulation that supersedes and universalizes previous privacy laws in Europe, offering citizens and residents of the European Union (EU) greater transparency and controls over how their personal data is used by others. The GDPR requires the compliance of businesses which transact in Europe, or which facilitate transaction in Europe.

Controllers and processors

There are two key roles defined in the GDPR with respect to personal data: Controller and Processor. The Controller is the business — you. As a customer of LEX247, you operate as the Controller when using our products and services. You have the responsibility for ensuring that the personal data you are collecting is being processed in a lawful manner pursuant to the GDPR and that you are using processors, such as LEX247, that are committed to handling the data in a compliant manner.

LEX247 is considered a Processor. We act on the instructions of the Controller (you), which come in the form of in-LEX247 or external (API) requests. Like Controllers, Processors have an obligation to explain what they do with personal data. However, as a Processor, we rely on you, the Controller of the data and our customer, to ensure that there is a lawful basis for processing.

Processors may, in the performance of their service, use other third-parties in the processing of personal data. These entities are known as sub-processors. For example, LEX247 leverages cloud infrastructure providers like Microsoft Azure, as well as other services for payment processing and automated emails to our customers.

With the implementation of the GDPR, we’re updating our privacy policy and End User License Agreements to include data processing sections that ensure that any business that requires a GDPR-compliant processor can use LEX247.

Processing of personal data

In order to process personal data, you need a lawful basis for processing. There are several methods to establish a lawful basis for GDPR compliance, but the most likely mechanisms you will rely on when communicating with your customers and leads is one of the following:

  1. Consent – Much of the GDPR revolves around the concept that your leads and customers have consented to you collecting their personal data, to you using (e.g. processing) their data, or to receiving communications. According to the ICO, the following criteria must be met to show valid consent:
  2. Consent must be freely given. This means giving people genuine, ongoing choice and control over how you use their data.
  3. Consent should be obvious and require positive action to opt in. Consent requests must be prominent, unbundled from other terms and conditions, concise, user-friendly, and easy to understand.
  4. Consent must specifically cover the data Controller’s name, the purposes of the processing, and the types of processing activity.
  5. Explicit consent must be expressly confirmed in words, rather than by any other positive action.
  6. There is no set time limit for consent. How long it lasts will depend on the context. You should review and refresh consent as appropriate.

In short, under the GDPR (and it’s a good idea in general), consent must be obtained by a “clear affirmative act”. In contrast to ‘clear affirmative acts’ pre-checked boxes or implicit consent are inadequate to establish consent.

If you are relying on consent as the lawful basis for processing data, the GDPR requires recorded evidence that consent has been given. You thus need in your business the ability to record proper consent for each customer and lead. When you enable the GDPR functionality in LEX247, you have the ability to obtain your lead’s consent at the point of opt-in, and that consent will be registered as a tag associated with that lead.

Note: LEX247 cannot control what you do with leads in an automated, API environment. You will need to ensure that, when LEX247 is acting as a sub-processor, that you use your main processors to ensure you are compliant with the GDPR.

  1. Contract – In addition to consent, another lawful basis for processing data is if the processing of personal data is necessary for the performance of a contract. Password reset, billing notifications, and onboarding communication would likely fall under this lawful basis. In other words, if it’s a customer who transacts with you, there are certain processing tasks that must be undertaken for you to provide the service. Likewise, to keeps its commitments under its EULA and provide service to you, LEX247 has to perform certain processing.

How LEX247 uses personal data

LEX247 is committed to full transparency in the handling and processing of your customers’ personal data that you control.

The User Data LEX247 collects: Name, Email, Phone, Address, Country, IP, and Username.

LEX247 tracks the following activities: transactions, helpdesk tickets and memberships.

Data is stored or deleted at the Controllers’ request. When a Controller ceases to be an active LEX247 customer, their accumulated data is retired to a storage cluster of servers with no front-facing access. After an arbitrary period of time, the data is deleted.

Data subject rights

Under the GDPR, EU data subjects are certain rights regarding their data. These include:

The right to data portability and the right to access:

LEX247 offers tools to let you answer customer queries about what data you have collected through LEX247 and what’s been done with it. Keep in mind, if you have collected personal data outside of LEX247, LEX247 has no knowledge or ability to answer queries regarding such data.

The right to be forgotten and the right to restriction of processing

Have a lead or client who wants their personal data out of your database? No problem! You can remove that contact from any list — or even delete them entirely. However, transactional records will remain intact for bookkeeping purposes (though personal data will be redacted (e.g. ‘blacked out’ from view).

Unless otherwise required by law, in the event that LEX247 receives any type of request from a data subject, we will engage the respective customer within seven days to respond to the data subject request.

Data processing addendum

Our data processing addendum (DPA) to our End-User Licensing Agreement formalizes many of the details described on this site in specific legal language. As part of the EULA, the DPA will govern the terms by which LEX247, as a data processor, processes data on behalf of its customers (who are typically data controllers) in accordance with Article 28 of the GDPR.

These include:

  • Sub-processors engaged in delivering our services.
  • Countries through which the data is passed (cross-border protocol).
  • Security measures undertaken to ensure that your data is kept private.
  • Breach notification protocol.

FAQ

In many cases, yes. Even businesses that are not based in the EU are considered to be subject to the GDPR if they are collecting personal data on EU residents. Enforcement of the GDPR outside of the EU will be done by EU authorities and it remains to be seen how aggressive they will be. Consult your own legal counsel but it is widely accepted that companies that collect personal data from EU residents will be subject to the requirements of the GDPR.

The GDPR does not require that data processing (including storage of data) be limited to the EU. The EU-US Privacy Shield is one of several valid lawful mechanisms to transfer data between the EU and the US. In addition to Privacy Shield, LEX247’s Data Processing Addendum includes the EU Model Clauses, which is also a valid mechanism for the lawful transfer of data between the EU and US. Our European-based customer data is stored in our data center located in Germany.

The GDPR applies to all personal data, even if it was collected before May 25, 2018. As your business is preparing for the implementation of the GDPR, you should make sure you can properly audit the consent records for the EU-residing members of your email list or that you can obtain and record evidence of consent going forward.

Yes! It contains information on our policies and efforts to comply with all applicable regulations and to guarantee the privacy of your data. It can be found here.

Yes! Our Data Processing Addendum to our EULA contains the details of our data processing and how we work with controllers and sub-processors to comply with the applicable regulations and to ensure the privacy of your data. You can obtain a copy of the LEX247 DPA by making a written request by email to our Data Protection Officer.

LEX247’s DPO is: Daniel Halan
Email address: Daniel.Halan@lex247.com

In accordance with Article 38 of the GDPR, members of the public may contact the DPO with regard to issues related to processing of their personal data and to exercise their rights under the GDPR – for example, to object to the processing of their data in cases where the data controller (i.e., LEX247’s customer) does not provide an adequate response.

LEX247 adheres to, and is audited annually for compliance with, the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard, which is a rigorous data protection framework oriented towards the protection of payment card data.

Our most recent PCI DSS audit documentation is available upon request. Please contact Daniel.Halan@lex247.com if you require the documentation.

Don’t hesitate to contact us through our contact page with any questions you may have.

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