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Privacy Law - where are we now? - Online CPD

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Package includes:

Onine CPD module  l  Booklet  l  PowerPoint Presentation

Package Fee (incl GST)

  • $205 - NZLS members and Associate members
  • $255 - Non-members

Note: Access to the online files is via your "My CPD" page. If you would like to purchase multiple packages, please contact us here.

Online CPD Module

Presentation time: 120 minutes

Why you should come to this seminar:
  • Privacy law affects all our clients, and they are increasingly expecting their lawyers to give sound advice on the Privacy Act as part of a range of legal services. A good understanding of the Privacy Act will help you to anticipate and avoid trouble for your clients, and to quickly and cost effectively fix problems once they have arisen.
  • New technologies and ways of doing business mean lawyers must not only be able to apply the law as it is, but to anticipate and be ready for judicial and legislative reforms designed to catch up with technological developments.
  • Significant opportunities and implications for businesses have opened up with the European Union award of “adequate” status, in December 2012, for New Zealand’s privacy laws. There are only four other countries in the world with this status and New Zealand is the only country in the Asia Pacific area.
Through discussion and practical scenarios, this seminar will provide:
  • A comprehensive guide to the principles of the Act – what they mean and how to deal with them
  • Awareness of privacy value vs business value; compliance/non-compliance with principles
  • Understanding of the Privacy Commissioner jurisdiction and the complaints process and the implications of recent Human Rights Tribunal and court decisions
  • An appreciation of the interrelationship of the Privacy Act with other areas of law
  • Skills in identifying legal and non-legal consequences, and legal and non-legal sanctions – and any mitigating circumstances
  • Information about the implications of the Law Commission recommendations, and the Government response.
Please contact us if you use a dial up internet connection.
 

Booklet

Authors: John Edwards, Dr Paul Roth
Published: 15 May, 2013
Pages: 105

Introduction

2013 is the twentieth anniversary of the enactment of the Privacy Act, so it is fitting for the New Zealand Law Society to offer another seminar on the topic. Since the first NZLS Privacy Act seminar in 1993, there have been a number of changes in the privacy law landscape, including all existing case law on the legislation in the form of Privacy Commissioner case notes and many Tribunal and High Court decisions.

The Privacy Act deals with the currency of “personal information”, that is, information about individuals. Even if you are a corporate lawyer with little direct concern with personal information in your practice, all your clients will work with this type of information all the time, so it is vitally important that lawyers are able to orient themselves in the terrain and know the rights and duties that operate within it. That a number of Privacy Act cases have concerned breaches by lawyers indicates that not all practitioners have come to grips with their obligations under the legislation. That many defendants in privacy cases have been poorly advised by their lawyers is clear from decisions of the Tribunal. Furthermore, it is clear that privacy policies in at least some public sector agencies are not reasonably effective, as demonstrated by recent high profile data breaches at the Earthquake Commission, ACC, IRD, Immigration NZ, the Ministry of Social Development, the Ministry of Education, and (Queenstown) Lakes Environmental.

New Zealand is a member of an ever-growing number of nations with privacy legislation. The first national data privacy law was Sweden’s Data Act in 1973. At last count, 86 out of the 193 members of the United Nations now have privacy laws, including many of New Zealand’s trading partners. This is recognition that in the modern world, there is a need for regulating the collection and use of personal information by government and business, both of whose activities are now carried on across borders in an increasingly connected world.

Internationally, privacy regulation is now under pressure to replace the present notification and consent model of data protection (as contained, for example, in principle 3 of our Privacy Act) with a model based on the use of data. This would require agencies to be transparent in their processing; offer and honor appropriate choices; and entrust agencies to ensure that risks posed to individuals by use of their data are assessed and managed. The emphasis is proposed to be upon the way data is used rather than how it is collected, as is the position at present. This is on the basis that the true value of data may not be understood at the time of its collection, and that future uses that could have significant individual and societal benefits may be lost if regulations focus solely on the collection of data.

Our intention with this booklet is to equip lawyers to deal with privacy issues that arise under the current law on a day to day basis in their practices, and in their clients’ businesses, and to be ready to recognise the import of forthcoming changes in technology, policy and legislation.

John Edwards

Paul Roth

PowerPoint Presentation

These are the slides included in the presentation.
Number of Slides: 64
 
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