Privacy watchdogs give EU, US three months to negotiate new Safe Harbor deal

European data protection authorities have given the European Commission and national governments three months to come up with an alternative to the Safe Harbor agreement swept away two weeks ago by a ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union.

But any new agreement must protect the personal data of European citizens from massive and indiscriminate surveillance, which is incompatible with EU law, the data protection authorities making up the Article 29 Working Party said late Friday.

Since the CJEU ruled on Oct. 6 that the Safe Harbor agreement between the Commission and U.S. authorities did not offer necessary legal guarantees, businesses that relied on it for the transfer of their customers’ or employees’ private personal information from the EU to the U.S. have been doing so in something of a legal vacuum.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Read more: Privacy watchdogs give EU, US three months to negotiate new Safe Harbor deal

Story added 19. October 2015, content source with full text you can find at link above.