A Social Economic Analysis of the Impact of GDPR on Security and Privacy Practices

Roslyn Layton, S. Elaluf-Calderwood
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) have been presented by many policymakers as fundamental, welfare enhancing policies. While individuals value privacy, these policies require significant up front and ongoing investment by firms. For example, an analysis commissioned by the California Department of Justice's Office of the Attorney General estimates 14:1 cost to benefit ratio. No such analysis could be found from EU authorities for the GDPR. Sweeping regulatory regimes can create unintended consequences. This paper offers a brief introduction to the new cybersecurity challenges created by the GDPR and CCPA within firms and in the larger Internet ecosystem. As a result of the regulation, firms face many challenges to comply with costly and complex rules, broad definitions of personally identifiable information (PII), and increased risk of fee and/or lawsuit for violations, vulnerabilities, and lack of compliance. Since the promulgation of the GDPR, important security side effects have reported including the blocking of public information in the WHOIS internet protocol database, identity theft through the hacking of the Right to Access provision (Article 15) and other provisions, and the proliferation of network equipment with security and privacy vulnerabilities. The paper also offers a brief overview of the Gordon-Loeb (GL) model used for calculating the optimal investment in cybersecurity. [1] A preliminary data set is offered to examine the difficulty of estimating the cost of cybersecurity investment in light of the GDPR. Notably, the value of the European Union's data economy was estimated to be €300 billion in 2016 [2]. The given GL model would suggest that the optimal investment to protect data would be €13.2 billion. The actual European cyber spend was some €15 billion in 2015, [3] a slightly higher number which covers the EU plus additional European countries, suggesting that the GL model some applicability. There are limited GL type models and tools to guide data protection or privacy investments, and given the emergence of new data protection expectations, it is worth investigating how and whether firms can deliver both sets of expenditures and to what degree. The low level of GDPR compliance suggests that a workable equation of data protection is still not clear for most firms.
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GDPR对安全和隐私实践影响的社会经济分析
《通用数据保护条例》(GDPR)和《加州消费者隐私法》(CCPA)被许多政策制定者视为基本的、提高福利的政策。虽然个人重视隐私,但这些政策需要公司大量的前期和持续投资。例如,加州司法部总检察长办公室委托进行的一项分析估计,成本效益比为14:1。欧盟当局没有对GDPR进行这样的分析。全面的监管制度可能会产生意想不到的后果。本文简要介绍了GDPR和CCPA在企业内部和更大的互联网生态系统中带来的新的网络安全挑战。由于该法规,公司面临着许多挑战,需要遵守成本高昂且复杂的规则,个人身份信息(PII)的广泛定义,以及因违规、漏洞和缺乏合规性而增加的费用和/或诉讼风险。自GDPR颁布以来,报道了重要的安全副作用,包括WHOIS互联网协议数据库中的公共信息被封锁,通过黑客攻击访问权条款(第15条)和其他条款窃取身份,以及具有安全和隐私漏洞的网络设备的扩散。本文还简要介绍了用于计算网络安全最优投资的Gordon-Loeb (GL)模型。[1]本文提供了一组初步数据,以检验根据GDPR估算网络安全投资成本的难度。值得注意的是,2016年欧盟数据经济的价值估计为3000亿欧元[2]。给定的GL模型表明,保护数据的最佳投资为132亿欧元。2015年,欧洲的实际网络支出约为150亿欧元,[3]这个数字略高,其中包括欧盟和其他欧洲国家,这表明GL模型具有一定的适用性。指导数据保护或隐私投资的GL类型模型和工具有限,鉴于新的数据保护期望的出现,值得调查的是,公司如何以及是否能够提供这两组支出,以及在多大程度上提供这两组支出。低水平的GDPR合规表明,对于大多数公司来说,一个可行的数据保护方程式仍然不清楚。
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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