Source: National Cyber Security – Produced By Gregory Evans
A landmark agreement on data-sharing between the United States and Europe is “invalid,” an adviser to a top European court said Wednesday, in a decision that could lay the groundwork for limitations on the National Security Agency’s global Internet spying practices. The NSA’s use of a trans-Atlantic “safe-harbor” agreement forged in 2000 to compel companies like Facebook to share personal data on European citizens demonstrates a lack of adequate privacy protections undergirding the pact, said Yves Bot, the advocate general for the European Court of Justice, in a nonbinding but potentially influential legal opinion. “The law and practice of the United States allow the large-scale collection of the personal data of citizens of the EU … without those citizens benefiting from effective judicial protection,” Bot wrote. Bot also said that the level of access granted to the NSA on transferred data constituted an interference with the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, which promises a right to protect personal data. The advocate general also said European data-protection authorities could suspend transfers of data to other countries on grounds of protecting privacy. The case was brought by Max Schrems, an Austrian law student, who initiated a challenge originally against […]
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