Carey
  July 24, 2024 - Santiago, Chile

Joint Committee approved the final text of bill which amend Law N° 19,628 on Protection of Private Life
  by Carey

On July 24, 2024, the joint committee approved what should be the final draft of the bill that amends Chilean Data Protection Law N° 19,628 (the “Law”).

After this stage, the draft of the Law needs to be approved by both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. Upon approval, it will be sent to the President of the Republic for presidential approval and eventually will be subject to review by the Constitutional Court.

The purpose of the Law is to update the regulatory framework regarding the protection and processing of personal data, in line with international standards on the handling of personal data, inspired by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of the European Union, to increase the standards of protection and to face the challenges of the digital economy, seeking a balance between the privacy of individuals and the free flow of information.

In this way, the new Law involves the implementation of relevant aspects and changes regarding personal data protection, among which we highlight the below:

Data Protection Agency

The Law establishes the creation of the Data Protection Agency (the “Agency”), which will ensure the effective protection of the privacy and personal data of individuals and will supervise the observance of the Law.

In particular, the Agency will have i) regulatory powers, such as issuing instructions and general rules, applying and interpreting legal and regulatory rules, proposing rules to ensure the protection of personal data; ii) supervisory powers, as regards compliance with the provisions of the Law by data controllers, and in resolving requests and claims made by data subjects; and iii) sanctioning powers, by exercising the power to impose penalties and determining the infringements and breaches incurred by data controllers.

Scope of Application

The Law applies to any natural or legal person, including public bodies, that processes personal data, except for processing carried out in the exercise of the freedom to express opinions and to inform, as well as to processing carried out by natural persons in connection with their personal activities.

Regarding the territorial scope, the Law will apply to all processing of personal data carried out by those “controllers” (defined as “any natural or legal person, public or private, who decides about the purposes and means of the processing of personal data”) or “data processors” (i.e. “the natural or legal person who processes personal data, on behalf of the data controller”) (i) established in the national territory; (ii) who carry out personal data processing operations on behalf of a controller established in the national territory; and (iii) whose data processing operations are intended to offer goods or services to data subjects located in Chile.

In this sense, it is important to point out that the data controller corresponding to legal persons not incorporated in Chile, must indicate in writing and before the Agency (as defined above), a valid and operative e-mail address of a natural or legal person, capable of acting on their behalf so that the data subject may exercise its rights and communicate with the controller, and where the corresponding communications and administrative notifications may be validly made.

Principles applicable to personal data processing

The Law introduces several principles to comply with when processing personal data. Among such principles, there are:

General rule of processing and legal basis

The Law also expands the catalogue of legal basis for the processing of personal data, which will be allowed in the following cases:

Data subjects’ rights

The Law establishes that all individuals, acting alone or represented, shall have the personal, non-transferable and non-waivable rights of i) access; ii) rectification; iii) cancellation; iv) objecting; v) objecting to automated individual decisions; vi) portability; and vii) restriction (blocking) of their personal data.

Duties of the data controller

The data controller, in addition to the corresponding obligations which derive from the enforcement of data subjects’ rights, will be subject to the following obligations, among others:

Personal Data International Transfer

The Law establishes specific scenarios under which international transfers are allowed, including the following:

Special categories of personal data

The Law establishes a general rule for the processing of sensitive data (i.e. data referring “to the physical or moral characteristics of persons or to facts or circumstances of their private life or intimacy, revealing ethnic or racial origin, political, union or trade union affiliation, socioeconomic situation, ideological or philosophical convictions, religious beliefs, data relating to health, human biological profile, biometric data, and information relating to sex life, sexual orientation and gender identity of a natural person”) subjecting the processing of such data to the consent of the data subject, with some exceptions, and regulating different subcategories of sensitive data, such as those relating to health and the human biological profile, and biometric data.

On the other hand, the Law introduces, regulating their processing, new special categories of (i) personal data of children and adolescents, (ii) personal data for historical, statistical, scientific and study or research purposes, and (iii) geolocation data, specifically.

Infringements and corresponding sanctions

The Law sets forth various penalties applicable to the infringement of the established obligations, which are classified into 3 categories: minor, serious and very serious.

By way of example, the law will consider as a minor infringement the total or partial breach of the duty of information and transparency, as a serious infringement the processing of personal data without a lawful basis or for a purpose other than that for which it was collected, and as a very serious infringement the processing of personal data in a fraudulent manner.

As for the applicable penalties, the Law provides for the imposition of fines for tax benefits, depending on the type of infringement incurred by the controller:

Data Protection Officer and Infringement Prevention Model

The law introduces the concept of Infringement Prevention Model consisting of compliance programs that the controller may voluntarily adopt as a mechanism to prevent infringements to the Law.

The Law establishes the minimum requirements of an Infringement Prevention Model and regulates its certification and registration process in a National Registry of Sanctions and Compliance, administered by the Agency. It should be noted that compliance by the controller with the duties of management and supervision of the Infringement Prevention Model certified by the Agency may constitute a mitigating circumstance.

Unlike the regulations of other jurisdictions, under the Law there will be no obligation for the controller to have a Data Protection Officer (“DPO”), a figure within the operational structure of an entity that fulfills the function of informing and advising the entity with respect to compliance with the personal data protection regulations. However, it will be imperative to have a DPO if an Infringement Prevention Model is adopted.

Entry into force

The Law will enter into force after 24 months from its publication in the Official Gazette.

In the following days, we will be updating the information available on the specialized data protection law website available here: protecciondedatos.carey.cl/en/

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