A Practical Guide to Getting Your Organisation PDP Law-Ready
As a follow-up to our last client update (click here to read the client update) on the personal data protection framework in Indonesia, the personal data protection bill was finally numbered as Law No. 27 of 2022 on Personal Data Protection (“PDP Law”) and came into effect on 17 October 2022.
Given the wide-reaching implications of the PDP Law on businesses, we have set out key facts about the PDP Law, as well as a compliance checklist below. We hope that this checklist can be a useful starting point for you in examining your data protection policies to ensure compliance with the new data protection framework in Indonesia.
Key Facts
- The PDP Law grants a two-year transitional period from 17 October 2022 for data controllers, data processors, and other parties related to a data processing activity to adjust their data processing practices with the PDP Law’s requirements.
- However, based on our informal discussions with the relevant Indonesian government officials, some provisions of the PDP Law became effective immediately from 17 October 2022. These are the provisions on prohibited conducts related to data processing activities, which are considered as criminal offences.
- The PDP Law does not apply retroactively to data processing activities carried out before 17 October 2022.
- Administrative sanctions under the PDP Law range from written warning, temporary termination of personal data processing activities, deletion or destruction of personal data, and/or administrative fine. In addition, imprisonment, criminal fine, asset confiscation, asset freezing, license revocation, and business dissolution (among many others) may also apply.
- The PDP Law will apply to businesses based both inside and outside of Indonesia. For further details on the application of the PDP Law to your businesses, please read our previous client update.
Compliance Checklist
This checklist gives a general overview of the key requirements of the PDP Law. Besides describing the relevant key provisions of the PDP Law, it details the actions that businesses should take to ensure compliance with the PDP Law.
Please note that this checklist is based on best market practice and is by no means exhaustive. We encourage clients to reach out to their counsels for further advice.
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Reference to PDP Law and Description |
Recommended Actions |
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1. | Lawful Basis for Processing Personal Data (Articles 20 and 21) | |||||||||||||
First, you should identify the applicable lawful basis for processing personal data before you commence any such processing. The PDP Law regulates six lawful bases for personal data processing. The basis that is most appropriate for you will depend on the purpose for processing and your relationship with the data subject. In summary, the six lawful bases are:
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You should:
If you are relying on explicit consent as your lawful basis for processing personal data, you should review how you request consent from the data subject. The PDP Law sets a high standard for consent in that there must be a genuine choice (e.g., it cannot be a precondition of service and separate from other terms and conditions) and control over how you use the data subject’s data. If your current practice on obtaining consent does not meet the PDP Law’s high standards or is poorly documented, you need to seek fresh PDP Law-compliant consent, identify a different lawful basis for your processing, or stop the processing. |
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2. | Data Subject’s Rights | |||||||||||||
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If you already have a privacy notice, you should ensure that such notice complies with the PDP Law, including:
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3. | Data Protection Impact Assessment (“DPIA”) (Article 34) | |||||||||||||
Your business must conduct a DPIA if you are planning to conduct data processing that has a high risk on the data subject’s rights/interests.
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You should:
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4. | Data Security (Article 35) | |||||||||||||
Your business must put the appropriate security safeguards in place.
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5. | Breach Notification (Article 46) | |||||||||||||
Your business must notify the affected data subjects and the data protection authority of any personal data breaches.
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6. | Accountability (Article 47) | |||||||||||||
Your business must be able to demonstrate how it complies with the PDP Law’s requirements.
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7. | Data Protection Officers (“DPO”) (Article 35) | |||||||||||||
Your business may need to appoint a DPO if you:
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You should:
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8. | Cross-Border Data Transfer (Article 56) | |||||||||||||
Your business may only transfer personal data outside of Indonesia if you comply with the conditions for transfer set out in the PDP Law:
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You should:
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Conclusion
As mentioned earlier, during the two-year transitional period, majority of the provisions in the PDP Law will not be immediately implemented. It is likely to be the case that the government will enact implementing regulations to the PDP Law, including on the establishment of the data protection authority.
However, it does not mean that businesses should adopt a “wait and see” approach until the end of the transitional period or the enactment of the implementing regulations. Rather, businesses should start proactively complying, especially considering that some of the provisions of the PDP Law are already effective. Businesses can refer to the general best practice in the market, whether in Indonesia or overseas, and can use the above compliance checklist as a starting point.
[1] The PDP Law indeed states “and” in relation to the DPO appointment requirements. This means a controller/processor that is subject to such requirements must meet all the three prescribed conditions. However, we believe this was not the drafter’s intention and it was merely a case of bad legislative drafting. Based on general best practice (e.g., the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation), the three conditions do not need to be fulfilled cumulatively, but instead alternatively (meaning a controller/processor only needs to meet one condition in order for the DPO appointment requirements to apply).