The meeting will concentrate on the planned EU Regulation and the recently published report by the Euro MP Jan Philipp Albrecht that identifies improvements to privacy laws on the internet and criticises the transfer of personal details to nonmember countries, e.g. air passenger data to US authorities. A second set of issues the meeting will be focusing on will be dealing with the implementation of the Cookie (E-Privacy) Directive in the EU member states. Passed as early as 2009, this EU Regulation gives the national legislators a wide scope that, in practice, leads to considerable problems.
“We’re very curious to learn about the views and opinions our network partners will be representing, and look forward to an open round of discussions,” said Johanna Laas, specialist in international privacy laws and initiator of PRIVACY EUROPE. “As a representative of the high privacy level in Germany, we’ll do everything we can to maintain this standard on the European level as well,” explained Laas.
The PRIVACY EUROPE network has set itself the target of promoting privacy laws in all EU member states and provides companies with expert contacts on the international level for privacy, legal, and IT issues applying to each country.
Besides exchanging ideas and information on the EU Regulation, the network partners will be presenting their own international privacy blog that will go online on 8 February, precisely on time for the network meeting. At www.privacy-europe.com, the blog will report regularly on international privacy issues.