European Union
The right of access is enshrined as part of the fundamental right to data protection in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. It is in fact the only one of the practical rights relating to personal data that is listed there. In the GDPR, this right is defined in various sections of Article 15. There is also a right to access in the GDPR's partner legislation, the Data Protection Law Enforcement Directive. The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has considered it "necessary to provide more precise guidance on how the right of access has to be implemented in different situations". When the EU Directive is transposed into Member State national law, the right of access may be suspended or restricted, as in the case of Germany in Article 34 of itsUnited Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, the website of the Information Commissioner's Office states regarding Subject Access Requests (SARs): "''You have the right to find out if an organization is using or storing your personal data. This is called the right of access. You exercise this right by asking for a copy of the data, which is commonly known as making a ‘subject access request.''" Before the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into force on 25 May 2018, organizations could charge a specified fee for responding to a SAR, of up to £10 for most requests. Following the GDPR: "''A copy of your personal data should be provided free in a commonly used and machine readable format. An organization may charge for additional copies. It can only charge a fee if it thinks the request is ‘manifestly unfounded or excessive’. If so, it may ask for a reasonable fee for administrative costs associated with the request''."Singapore
Personal data in Singapore is protected under the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (PDPA). The PDPA establishes a data protection law that comprises various rules governing the collection, use, disclosure and care of personal data. Access to personal data is laid out as part of Part IV, chapter 21 which states that on request of an individual, an organization shall, as soon as reasonably possible, provide the individual with: * (a) personal data about the individual that is in the possession or under the control of the organization; and * (b) information about the ways in which the personal data referred to in paragraph (a) has been or may have been used or disclosed by the organization within a year before the date of the requestUnited States
Five federal laws include a right of access to personal data: * FCRA Fair Credit Reporting Act, * FERPA Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, * COPPA Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, * HIPAABrazil
According to the Brazilian General Data Protection Law, Subject Access Requests need to be fulfilled within 15 days.Transatlantic data flows
Transatlantic data flows (or at least those going West, towards the US) are governed by the EU–US Privacy Shield. One of the Privacy Shield principles is the right of access. Indeed, it is most fundamental in enabling accountability mechanisms around personal data processing. This example demonstrates that a European-style conception of privacy does not necessarily have to be perceived by American actors as unduly imposing new restrictions on free speech by data subjects. This Privacy Shield practice also shows that the case of civilian data protection (as under GDPR) is quite different from the case of criminal investigation, where a right of access is exercised as a "data request" by a government, not an individual, as in the US Supreme Court caseUnited Nations
The aspirational Sustainable Development Goal 16, target 9, calls for the provision of legal identity for all human beings. "In the digital economy, this becomes the right to a digital identity." Such an identity could help in filing Subject Access Requests.See also
* Max Schrems#Complaints with the Irish Data Protection Commissioner 2011 * Facebook–Cambridge Analytica data scandal * Data access *References
{{ReflistFurther reading
* Norris, Clive, Antonella Galetta, Paul de Hert, and Xavier L'Hoiry. 2016. The Unaccountable State of Surveillance: Exercising Access Rights in Europe (book). * Ausloos, Jef, René Mahieu, Michael Veale. 2019. Getting Data Subject Rights Right: A submission to the European Data Protection Board from international data rights academics, to inform regulatory guidance, 40 pages , doi=10.31228/osf.io/e2thg , * Mahieu, René, Jef Ausloos. 2020. Recognising and Enabling the Collective Dimension of the GDPR and the Right of Access. LawArXiv. July 2. doi:10.31228/osf.io/b5dwm Digital rights Access to Knowledge movement