Growing and Important
Growing and Important
Growing and Important
One exception in the act provides that the law does not apply
to the processing of personal information in the Philippines that
was lawfully collected from residents of foreign jurisdictions —
an exception helpful for Philippines companies that offer cloud
services.
Approach
The Philippines law takes the approach that “The processing of
personal data shall be allowed subject to adherence to the
principles of transparency, legitimate purpose, and
proportionality.”
Required agreements
The law requires that when sharing data, the sharing be
covered by an agreement that provides adequate safeguards
for the rights of data subjects, and that these agreements are
subject to review by the National Privacy Commission.
Surveillance
Requirement to notify
The law further provides that not all “personal data breaches”
require notification., which provides several bases for not
notifying data subjects or the data protection authority. Section
38 of the IRRs provides the requirements of breach notification:
The breached information must be sensitive personal
information, or information that could be used for identity
fraud, and
There is a reasonable belief that unauthorized acquisition
has occurred, and
The risk to the data subject is real, and
The potential harm is serious.
The law provides that the Commission may determine that
notification to data subjects is unwarranted after taking into
account the entity’s compliance with the Privacy Act, and
whether the acquisition was in good faith.
Notification contents
The contents of the notification must at least:
Describe the nature of the breach;
The personal data possibly involved;
The measures taken by the entity to address the breach;
The measures take to reduce the harm or negative
consequence of the breach;
The representatives of the personal information controller,
including their contact details;
Any assistance to be provided to the affected data
subjects.
Penalties
The law provides separate penalties for various violations, most
of which also include imprisonment. Separate counts exist for
unauthorized processing, processing for unauthorized purposes,
negligent access, improper disposal, unauthorized access or
intentional breach, concealment of breach involving sensitive
personal information, unauthorized disclosure, and malicious
disclosure.
Republic Act No. 10173, or the Data Privacy Act of 2012 (DPA), was
principally authored by former Senator Edgardo J. Angara during his
chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Science and Technology, and
passed into law in 2012.
Republic Act No. 10173, the full title of which is “An Act Protecting Individual Personal
Information in Information and Communications Systems in the Government and the Private
Sector, Creating for this Purpose a National Privacy Commission, and for Other Purposes,”
declares as State policy the protection of the right to privacy and communication while
ensuring the free flow of information to promote innovation and growth.
The law seeks to protect “personal information” (defined as, “information, whether recorded in
a material form or not, from which the identity of an individual is apparent or can be
reasonably and directly ascertained by the entity holding the information, or when put
together with other information would directly and certainly identify an individual”) that
undergoes “processing,” which is defined as, “an operation or a set of operations performed
upon personal information, such as, but not limited to, the collection, recording, organization,
storage, updating or modification, retrieval, consultation, use, consolidation, blocking, erasure,
or destruction of data.”
The DPA also covers “privileged information” (“data which under the Rules of Court and other
pertinent laws constitute privileged communication,” for example, attorney-client privilege,
physician-patient privilege, etc.), and “sensitive personal information,” which is defined as,
“information:
• About an individual’s race, ethnic origin, marital status, age, color, and religious,
philosophical, or political affiliation;
• Issued by government agencies peculiar to an individual which includes, but not limited to,
social security numbers, previous or current health records, licenses or its denials, suspension,
or revocation, and tax returns; and
To administer this law, the NPC was created. It is currently headed by its pioneering set of
Commissioners who were all appointed in March 2016: Privacy Commissioner and Chairman
Raymond Liboro, a former Assistant Secretary at the Department of Science and Technology;
Deputy Privacy Commissioner Ivy Patdu, a practicing lawyer and consultant medico-legal
physician; and Deputy Commissioner Dondi Mapa, who held the position of National
Technology Officer at Microsoft Philippines.
Comprised of fourteen (14) rules and seventy-two (72) sections, the IRR, apart from
supplementing the DPA’s provisions, provides for specific rules on the following: Data Privacy
Principles; Data Breach Notification; Outsourcing and Subcontracting Agreements; Registration
and Compliance Requirements; and Rules on Accountability.
The DPA and its IRR cover the processing of personal data by any natural and juridical person
in the government or private sector. They apply to an act done or practice engaged in and
outside of the Philippines if:
• The natural or juridical person involved in the processing of personal data is found or
established in the Philippines;
• The act, practice, or processing relates to personal data about a Philippine citizen or
Philippine resident;
• The act, practice, or processing of personal data is done or engaged in by an entity with links
to the Philippines, with due consideration to international law and comity.
The IRR specifies additional definitions of key terms such as “data processing systems,” “data
sharing,” “personal data,” “personal data breach,” and “security incident.” It also clarifies that
“processing” may be performed either through automated means, or manual processing, if the
personal data are contained or are intended to be contained in a filing system.
Substantively, the IRR expounds on the principles of transparency, legitimate purpose, and
proportionality, not only in the processing of personal data per se, but also in the collection
and retention thereof. General principles for data sharing are also laid down.
To concretely carry out these principles, the IRR enumerates specific organizational, physical,
and technical security measures which personal information controllers and processors are
mandated to undertake in relation to the personal data which they process.
The IRR also categorizes the rights of the data subject, as enumerated under the DPA, into the
following: the right to be informed; the right to object; the right to access; the right to
rectification; the right to erasure or blocking; and the right to damages.
Violations of the DPA are sanctioned with both imprisonment and payment of fines as
penalties. Such violations include unauthorized processing, accessing due to negligence,
improper disposal, processing for unauthorized purposes, unauthorized access or intentional
breach, concealment of security breaches, malicious disclosure, and unauthorized disclosure.
The IRR provides that personal information controllers and processors shall register with the
NPC their data processing systems and automated processing operations, subject to
notification, one (1) year after the effectivity of the IRR.
Promulgated last Aug. 24, 2016, the IRR will take effect fifteen (15) days after its publication.
Entities covered by the DPA and its IRR have one (1) year to comply with their provisions from
the date of effectivity of the IRR.
In 2012, the Congress of the Philippines passed Republic Act No. 10173, also known as
the Data Privacy Act (DPA) of 2012. Five years later, the DPA’s Implementing Rules and
Regulations was put in effect on September 9, 2016, thus mandating all companies to
comply.
The act is a necessary and important precaution in a world economy that’s swiftly going
digital. In 2014, it was estimated that 2.5 quintillion — or 2.5 billion billion — bytes of data
were created everyday. This includes unprecedented knowledge about what real individuals
are doing, watching, thinking, and feeling.
Companies must be held accountable not only for what they do with customer data — but
how they protect that data from third parties. The past few years of security breaches, system
errors, and ethical scandals within some of the country’s major banks have reminded us that
there is much work to be done.
So, where to begin for institutions who want to comply with RA 10173 and be proactive
about their consumers’ digital privacy?
What is RA 10173?
RA 10173, or the Data Privacy Act, protects individuals from unauthorized processing of
personal information that is (1) private, not publicly available; and (2) identifiable, where the
identity of the individual is apparent either through direct attribution or when put together
with other available information.
Second, personal information must be handled properly. Information must be kept accurate
and relevant, used only for the stated purposes, and retained only for as long as reasonably
needed. Customers must be active in ensuring that other, unauthorized parties do not have
access to their customers’ information.
Third, personal information must be discarded in a way that does not make it visible and
accessible to unauthorized third parties.