Microsoft Offering GDPR-Like Protection for All Customers

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Microsoft Offering GDPR-Like Protection for All Customers


Microsoft plans to expand GDPR privacy protections to all its customers, both inside and outside the European Union.



Microsoft is expanding privacy protection beyond the borders of the European Union.
The software giant is planning to offer the same rights that come with the EUs General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) framework to all of its customers, whether they reside in Europe or not. (See
GDPR Compliance: Enterprises Have Two Options to Consider
.)
We believe privacy is a fundamental human right, Julie Brill, corporate vice president and Microsofts deputy general counsel, wrote in a May 21
blog post
. As people live more of their lives online and depend more on technology to operate their businesses, engage with friends and family, pursue opportunities, and manage their health and finances, the protection of this right is becoming more important than ever.
GDPR officially goes into effect this Friday, May 25.
The law offers sweeping protections for consumers and residents of the EU, including the right to view data that a company has collected, and the ability to force businesses to delete personal data if its no longer needed.
(Source:
Flickr
)
At the same time, an enterprise must legally respond to these requests, within a certain period, or face large fines, and many are using the opportunity to revamp entire policies around data management, data collection, compliance and security. (See
GDPR Is Driving Businesses to Revamp Privacy & Security Policies
.)
Its also not large enterprises, such as Microsoft, that could face EU fines. Smaller firm are also subject to GDPR guidelines if an EU citizen can prove his or her privacy was violated. (See
4 Steps to Make Your Website GDPR Compliant
.)
For a company such as Microsoft, GDPR is both an opportunity -- it sells products to help with new compliance regulations -- as well as a minefield to maneuver around since it collects data on nearly everyone through its ubiquitous software, as well as through its Azure public cloud platform.
Since GDPR was first announced in 2016, Microsoft claims it has more than 1,600 engineers working on these issues and building different privacy and compliance controls into the companys software products.
However, this weeks announcement takes that a step further by expanding those rights to all its customers. Specifically, Redmond points to
Chapter 3 of the GDPR framework
, which creates a provision called data subject rights.
To expand those rights, Microsoft will:

Include the right to know what data we collect about you, to correct that data, to delete it and even to take it somewhere else.
Our privacy dashboard
gives users the tools they need to take control of their data.

Charles King, the principal analyst at Pund-IT, believes that Microsoft cannot litigate or argue GDPR away and that the company has to deal with the new guidelines on a much different level, especially it the EU laws are used as a basis for privacy protection in other countries. This means its better to embrace GDPR now in order to stay ahead.
In an email to Security Now, King noted:

Its also interesting that Microsoft used the blog to discuss its Data Subject Rights effort that will extend the GDPR framework across all of its geographies and customers. Thats an aggressive move that recognizes two important points: 1) that along with being here to stay, GDPR encompasses workable practices that are likely to be appreciated and embraced by the customers it affects, and 2) that while GDPR only impacts the EU, it could well become a framework for similar efforts in other countries and regions. By embracing GDPR in its own Data Subject Rights, Microsoft is ensuring that it will stay even or ahead of those efforts rather than having to reinvent best practices whenever a commercial market goes down the GDPR path.

Additionally, Microsoft is updating its
company privacy and product statements
to reflect GDPR and its own privacy stance.
One thing thats not clear in Microsoft announcement is whether these protections extend to LinkedIn, which is owned by Redmond. However, the social media and jobs site
did update its own privacy and data collection guidelines
earlier this month.
Related posts:
GDPR, AI & a New Age of Consent for Enterprises
GDPR: The New Price We Pay for Data Privacy
GDPR: Your Enterprise Security Checklist
GDPR Non-Compliance: Will Your Enterprise Get Busted?
— Scott Ferguson is the managing editor of Light Reading and the editor of
Security Now
. Follow him on Twitter
@sferguson_LR
.

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Microsoft Offering GDPR-Like Protection for All Customers