GDPR rules have big effect on UC applications (original) (raw)

The European Union General Data Protection Regulation sets tighter controls on businesses and how they handle customers' personally identifiable information.

The European Union General Data Protection Regulation -- more commonly known as GDPR -- goes into effect May 25, 2018. GDPR rules include various components to regulate the handling of personally identifiable information for people living within European Union member countries. Fines for failing to follow GDPR rules can be steep: up to 4% of global revenue or 20 million euros -- whichever is greater.

GDPR empowers individuals by giving them access to their data. Under GDPR rules, individuals can move data from one repository to another and have their data removed from repositories completely.

GDPR also puts limits on data gathering and mandates that companies handling personal data provide breach notifications. In addition, organizations that process data from at least 5,000 individuals a year are required to appoint a data protection officer to ensure GDPR enforcement.

For organizations, the primary benefit of GDPR is harmonizing data privacy rules across the European Union. No longer will companies have to navigate a mix of varying regulations.

On the downside, GDPR rules will require companies operating in the European Union to ensure they are in compliance even if information gathered from EU citizens is stored or processed outside the EU.

Collaboration apps gather reams of data

The first step in any GDPR compliance approach is appointing a data protection officer. This position is required if you have data on more than 5,000 EU citizens, but it's potentially not a bad idea even if you're under that number.

Specific to unified communications and collaboration (UCC) applications, you'll want to conduct an impact assessment that addresses the following:

As with any compliance effort, UC leaders should work hand in hand with their legal and risk management functions to ensure they understand what is required. UC leaders need to implement certain controls to ensure they are meeting GDPR storage, reporting and customer access requirements.

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