Article 68 European Data Protection Board

Author(s):  
Christopher Docksey

Article 57 (Tasks of supervisory authorities), Article 58 (Powers of supervisory authorities) (see too recital 129); Article 69 (Independence of the EDPB); Article 70 (Tasks of the EDPB); Article 71 (Reports); Article 72 (Procedure within the EDPB); Article 73 (Chair of the EDPB); Article 74 (Tasks of the Chair); Article 75 (Secretariat of the EDPB) (see too recitals 118 and 140); Article 76 (Confidentiality within the EDPB).

Author(s):  
David Erdos

This book explores the interface between European data protection and the freedom of expression activities of traditional journalism, professional artists, and both academic and non-academic writers from both an empirical and normative perspective. It draws on an exhaustive examination of both historical and contemporary public domain material and a comprehensive questionnaire of European Data Protection Authorities (DPAs). Empirically it is found that, notwithstanding an often confusing statutory landscape, DPAs have sought to develop an approach to regulating the journalistic media based on contextual rights balancing. However, they have struggled to secure a clear and specified criterion of strictness as regards standard-setting or a consistent and reliable approach to enforcement. DPAs have appeared even more confused as regards other traditional publishers, largely abstaining from regulating most professional artists and writers but attempting to subject all academic disciplines to onerous statutory restrictions established for medical, scientific, and related research. From these findings, it is argued that balancing contextual rights has value and should be both generalized across all traditional publishers and systematically and sensitively developed through structured and robust co-regulation. Such co-regulation should adopt the new code of conduct and monitoring provisions included in the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) as a broad guideline. DPAs should accord strong deference to any codes and monitoring bodies which verifiably meet the accredited criteria but must engage more proactively when these are absent. In any case, DPAs should also intervene directly as regards particularly serious or systematic issues and have an increasingly important role in ensuring a joined-up approach between traditional publishing and new media activity.


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