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U.S., UK enter agreement in principle on data flow

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security Of Interest to Non-US Persons EU UK Biden GDPR EU-US Data Privacy Framework

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

On June 8, President Biden presented an agreement in principle to allow for the free flow of data between the U.S. and the UK. Announced as part of the administration’s “Atlantic Declaration for a Twenty-First Century U.S.-UK Economic Partnership,” the “data bridge” would facilitate data flows between the two countries while ensuring strong, effective privacy protections. “​​The trusted and secure flow of data across our borders is foundational to efforts to further innovation,” the White House said in the announcement. “We are working to finalize our respective assessments swiftly to implement this framework.” A joint statement issued by the UK Secretary of State for Science, Innovation, and Technology, the Rt. Hon. Chloe Smith MP, and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina M. Raimondo reiterated the two countries’ commitment to establishing “a data bridge that would restore a robust and reliable mechanism for UK-US data flows.” The data bridge would also help facilitate data transfers to U.S. organizations that rely on other data transfer mechanisms under UK law, the joint statement said.

Meanwhile, the U.S. and the EU are working to finalize the EU-US Data Privacy Framework (covered by InfoBytes here)—a replacement for the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield, which was annulled by the Court of Justice of the EU in 2020 after the court determined that data transferred under the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield would not be subject to the same level of protections prescribed by the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.