The The Problem of Trans-Border Information Flows in the Protection of Personal Information

Mthuthukisi Malahleka
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Abstract

Cross-border transfers of personal information have become an important integrant of international trade, global economic activities enabler and a component of digital services driver, however, they are faced with the limitations of cross-border personal information transfers and data localisation laws. Various methodologies are used to process and transfer personal information across the borders such as cloud computing. Cloud computing has grown to include more users across different countries through its transnational characteristics on cross-border personal information transfers and triggers the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (POPIA) application. POPIA seeks to promote and protect personal information when processed by public or private bodies. Personal information also forms part of privacy which is a fundamental right enshrined under section 14 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. Therefore, the processing of personal information unlawfully across South Africa is a violation of the fundamental right to privacy and the POPIA. A comparative analysis of the provisions of the European Union (EU) General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) on cross-border data transfers will be used to illustrate the shortcomings of section 72 of the POPIA in the cloud computing context. The GDPR has set a benchmark for international data protection standards and POPIA must comply with those standards if South Africa wants to maintain its status as part of the international information technology market.
个人信息保护中的跨境信息流动问题
个人信息的跨境传输已成为国际贸易的重要组成部分、全球经济活动的推动者和数字服务驱动力的组成部分,然而,它们面临着跨境个人信息传输和数据本地化法律的限制。处理和跨境传输个人信息的方法多种多样,如云计算。云计算因其跨境个人信息传输的跨国特性,已吸引了更多不同国家的用户,并触发了《个人信息保护法》(2013 年第 4 号,POPIA)的应用。个人信息保护法》旨在促进和保护公共或私人机构处理的个人信息。个人信息也是隐私权的一部分,而隐私权是 1996 年《南非共和国宪法》第 14 条规定的一项基本权利。因此,在南非各地非法处理个人信息是对基本隐私权和《公众信息权法》的侵犯。通过对欧盟《一般数据保护条例》(GDPR)中有关跨境数据传输的规定进行比较分析,可以说明《南非共和国宪法》第 72 条在云计算方面的缺陷。GDPR 为国际数据保护标准设定了一个基准,如果南非想要保持其作为国际信息技术市场一部分的地位,《个人信息保护法》就必须遵守这些标准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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