The Directive
on Privacy and Electronic Communications (2002/58/EC)
Overview
Summary of Changes
Implementation in the UK
Government Response to Consultation
List of Respondees
The Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003
Guidance on the Regulations
Contact Us
Background
Operation "Secure Your Server"
Memorandum of Understanding against Spam
( international action regarding enforcement against spammers)
Government Contact
Further Information and Links
Overview
As part of the European Commission's 1999
Review of the communications framework, a draft proposal to update the existing
Telecoms Data Protection Directive (97/66/EC) was adopted on 12 July
2000, formerly known as the Communications Data Protection Directive (CDPD) but
now known as the Directive on Privacy and Electronic Communications (DPEC). The
overriding aim of the new Directive is to take account of technological changes
and to make the provisions as technology-neutral as possible. Documents
detailing the progress of the draft Directive are available on the European
Commission's website on the new communications regulatory framework
here.
The
final Directive, the DPEC, was adopted on 12 July 2002 and required
implementation in Member States by 31 October 2003.
A
public consultation on how to implement the DPEC in the UK was launched
on 27 March 2003, and ran for 12 weeks, closing on 19 June 2003. Final
implementing
Regulations were prepared, taking into account the
responses received, and were laid before Parliament on 18 September
2003, coming into force on 11 December 2003.

Summary of Changes
The new Directive:
-
replaces existing
definitions for telecommunications services and networks with new definitions
for electronic communications and services to ensure technological neutrality
and clarify the position of e-mail and use of the internet;
-
enables the provision of
value added services based on location and traffic data, subject to the
consent of subscribers (for example, location based advertising to mobile
phone users);
-
removes the possibility for
a subscriber to be charged for exercising the right not to appear in public
directories;
-
introduces new information
and consent requirements on entries in publicly available directories,
including a requirement that subscribers are informed of all the usage
possibilities of publicly available directories - e.g. reverse searching from
a telephone number in order to obtain a name and address;
-
extends controls on
unsolicited direct marketing to all forms of electronic communications
including unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE or Spam) and SMS to mobile
telephones; UCE and SMS will be subject to a prior consent requirement, so the
receiver is required to agree to it in advance, except in the context of an
existing customer relationship, where companies may continue to email or SMS
to market their own similar products on an 'opt-out' basis;
-
specifies that Member
States may introduce provisions on the retention of traffic and location data
for law enforcement purposes;
-
introduces controls on the
use of cookies on websites. Cookies and similar tracking devices will be
subject to a new transparency requirement - anyone that employs these kinds of
devices must provide information on them and allow subscribers or users to
refuse to accept them if they wish.

Implementation in the UK
On 27 March 2003 the DTI launched a twelve-week
public consultation on how best to implement the Directive in the UK. The
consultation closed on 19 June 2003.
The consultation document can still be accessed
from the links below, in both .doc and .pdf formats, either by the section(s)
you are interested in, or as a complete document (126 pages).
|
|
View
.doc version |
View .pdf
version |
|
Introduction |
Intro |
Intro |
|
|
Questions |
Questions |
|
Background - current rules and impact of new Directive |
Chapter 1 |
Chapter 1 |
|
Scope and definitions
Articles 1, 2 and 3
Recitals 1 to 19 |
Chapter 2 |
Chapter 2 |
|
Security and confidentiality
Articles
4 and 5
Recitals
20 - 26 |
Chapter 3 |
Chapter 3 |
|
Network and service providers' requirements: traffic data,
itemised billing, calling line identification, location data services, call
tracing and forwarding
Articles
6, 7, 8, 9 and 10
Recitals
26 - 37 |
Chapter 4 |
Chapter 4 |
|
Subscriber directories
Articles
12 and 16
Recitals
38, 39, 49 |
Chapter 5 |
Chapter 5 |
|
Unsolicited commercial communications: phone, fax, e-mail and
SMS messages
Article
13
Recitals
40 - 45 |
Chapter 6 |
Chapter 6 |
|
Law enforcement and security access to data
Articles
14 and 15
Recitals
11 and 46 - 47 |
Chapter 7 |
Chapter 7 |
|
Directive on Privacy and Electronic Communications 2002/58/EC |
Annex 1 |
Annex 1 |
|
Draft Statutory Instrument: The Privacy and Electronic
Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003 |
Annex 2 |
Annex 2 |
|
Existing Guidance on the Telecommunications (Data Protection and
Privacy) Regulations 1999 |
Annex 3 |
Annex 3 |
|
Draft Partial Regulatory Impact Assessment |
Annex 4 |
Annex 4 |
|
Consultation Criteria |
Annex 5 |
Annex 5 |
|
 |
|
Full consultation document including annexes
(126
pages) |
Complete Document |
Complete Document |
Alternatively, hard copies of the complete
consultation document are available from the DTI Publications Orderline, quoting
reference URN 03/762:
Online:
http://www.dti.gov.uk/publications/
E-mail:
publications@dti.gsi.gov.uk
Telephone: 0870 1502 500
Fax: 0870 1502 333
Mail: DTI Publications Orderline
ADMAIL 528
London
SW1W 8YT

Government Response to Consultation
The Government published its Response to
Consultation on 18 September 2003. This summarises the responses to
consultation and the key changes that the Government has made in finalising the
Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003 as a
result. The Government Response is available in
PDF (110 Kb) and
MSWord (90 Kb) formats.
List of Respondees
A list of those who responded to the
consultation is available in
PDF (55 Kb) and
MSWord (102 Kb) formats. Details of respondees identified by us as
private individuals have been omitted from the list to protect their privacy.
Given the volume of responses received during
the consultation – more than 420 in all – we have decided not to publish these
in full on this website. However, if you would like to see a hard copy of a
non-confidential response from an organisation on the published list of
respondees, please email a request to
cdpd@dti.gsi.gov.uk remembering to include both your name and
address, and the name of the respondee.
The Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC
Directive) Regulations 2003
The Regulations, Statutory Instrument 2003 No.
2426, were laid before Parliament on 18 September 2003. The final text of the
Regulations is available on the
HMSO Website.
The Regulations came into force on 11 December
2003.
A final version of the Regulatory Impact
Assessment on the Regulations is available in
PDF (37 Kb) and
MSWord (118 Kb) formats, or in hard copy on request from the
Government Contact
A transposition note has been prepared to show
how the Articles in the DPEC are being implemented, and is available in
PDF (109 Kb) and
MSWord (67 Kb) formats.

Guidance on the Regulations
Guidance notes on the new provisions have been
prepared by the Information Commissioner – the enforcer of the new Regulations.
It is available on the ICO website on their
electronic communications guidance pages, and also below in two parts in
PDF format:
ICO guidance
Part 1 (610 KB)
ICO guidance
Part 2 (385 KB)
The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB)
provides independent guidance for Internet users and online operators on the use
of cookies and how to notify users of them under the new rules at:
www.allaboutcookies.org
An
explanatory note for subscribers on their rights over unsolicited phone, fax,
e-mail and SMS marketing is available
here.
Contact Us
If you
would like to be included on our contact list on this Directive, to hear about
future developments, please either email your details to
cdpd@dti.gsi.gov.uk or send them in writing to the address given under
Government Contact, clearly stating your interest in being kept informed
of developments on the DPEC.
The
cdpd@dti.gsi.gov.uk inbox can also be used for enquiries on the new
provisions, but please note that the DTI cannot give legal advice on the new
provisions, and many questions relating to interpretation of the new Regulations
and compliance advice.

Background
On the
30 May 2002 the European Parliament voted to accept a compromise text, opening
the way for formal adoption of the DPEC on 12 July 2002. Information about the
key stages in negotiations is available on the European Commission's website
here.
The text of the Directive can be accessed on
the European Commission's website
here.
The DPEC is one of the measures that arose from
the European Commission's 1999 Review of the regulatory framework for electronic
communications. Other key elements of the Review package include the Framework
Directive (2002/21/EC), the Access Directive (2002/19/EC), the Authorisation
Directive (2002/20/EC) and the Universal Service Directive (2002/22/EC),
implemented in the UK via the
Communications Act 2003.
The DPEC, which was adopted on 12 July 2002,
makes a number of changes, in the light of technological developments, to the
current
Directive (97/66/EC) concerning the processing of personal data and
the protection of privacy in the telecommunications sector.
The new Directive replaces existing definitions
for telecommunications networks and services with new definitions for electronic
communications networks and services. These changes are intended to ensure
technological neutrality and interoperability among networks and systems in
order to facilitate the provision of a wide range of electronic communications
services and guarantee the maximum level of consumers' personal data and privacy
protection.
In particular, the new Directive enables the
provision of value added services based on location and traffic data, subject to
the consent of subscribers. It removes the possibility of a subscriber being
charged for exercising the right not to appear in public directories. It
introduces also new information and consent requirements on entries in publicly
available directories, including a requirement that subscribers are informed of
all the usage possibilities of publicly available directories (e.g. reverse
searching from a telephone number in order to obtain a name and address).
In addition, the new Directive clarifies the
position of e-mail and use of the Internet and extends controls on unsolicited
direct marketing to all forms of electronic communications including unsolicited
commercial e-mail (UCE or Spam) and SMS to mobile telephones. Finally, it allows
Member States to introduce provisions on the retention of traffic and location
data for law enforcement purposes and it introduces controls on the use of
cookies on websites.

Operation
Secure your Server : the UK, USA and 26 other governments united to improve
server security in the fight against Spam
Operation ‘Secure Your Server’ was launched on
29th January 2004, as one of the first large scale initiatives to fight spam (or
Unsolicited Commercial Emails - UCE) worldwide. It aims to educate the Internet
community about how to secure their servers to prevent them from forwarding spam
unintentionally.
The Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), the
Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) are
amongst the main protagonists of this initiative led by the US Federal Trade
Commission (FTC), in which 26 other nations will cooperate.
In total
32,955 emails were sent out to the operators of potententially unsecure servers,
covering 19,819 domains and 119,211 IP numbers in 196 countries.
As of
mid-April 2004, more than 79,167 accesses were registered to the Secure Your
Server homepage (http://www.ftc.gov/secureyourserver/ ) since the email letters
were sent in January 2004. The Secure Your Server homepage is dedicated to the
project, and contains many links to information detailing how to fix unsecure
servers. The monthly breakdown of access to the webpage is as follows:
January
2004: 41,640
February
2004: 23,618
March 2004:
9,272
April 2004:
3,961
This
represents a very high and impressive access rate by FTC standards. While this
certainly is not a scientific measure of success of this educational campaign,
it certainly indicates that we were able to generate significant interest in the
issue and, hopefully, induce action on the part of operators of unsecure
servers.
We are
currently in the process of considering any possible next steps we could take in
combating the problem of unsecure servers and their role in spamming operations.
Read the press release –
click here
Go to the
FTC’s dedicated page:
www.ftc.gov/secureyourserver
(DTI is not responsible for the content of
external sites)
Operation Secure Your Server: Full Background - click Here
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
The DTI, the
Office of Fair Trading (OFT) and the Information Commissioner (ICO) announced on
Friday 2 July 2004 that they had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with
the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in the United States, the Australian
communications Authority (ACA) and the Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission (ACCC) for mutual assistance in the enforcement of spam laws.
The
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aims to deal with the problem of spam as it
increasingly threatens the growth of the internet and the information society as
a whole. It will mean for the first time that:
*
Enforcement authorities in the UK, United States and Australia will work
together to investigate spammers in those countries;
* enforcement authorities across all three countries will take part in joint
training initiatives to combat spam;
* international solutions and strengthening capabilities will be developed to
trace and convict spammers; and
* cross border enforcement against spammers will take effect.
You can download the MoU as a PDF document by clicking here.
A full
press release can be found at:
http://www.gnn.gov.uk/environment/detail.asp?
ReleaseID=121897&NewsAreaID=2&NavigatedFrom
Department=True
Information
is also available on the FTC website under
http://www.ftc.gov/spam/ and
http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2004/07/mou.htm
The website
of the Australian Communications Authority at
http://www.aca.gov.au/consumer_info/spam/index.htm
And on the
website of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission at
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/8135
Click HERE to find out more on SPAM.
Government Contact
Mr Ihtsham Hussain
Telecoms
Policy
BAY 207
151
Buckingham Palace Road
London
SW1W 9SS
Telephone: +44 (0)20 7215 2969
Fax: +44
(0) 20 7215 1721
E-mail:cdpd@dti.gsi.gov.uk
Further Information and Links
The Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC
Directive) Regulations 2003 are available on the
HMSO Website.
The E-commerce Directive
- implementing Regulations have provisions
affecting UCE
See
www.allaboutcookies.org
for background
on cookies from the Interactive Advertising Bureau
The URL for
the Information Commissioner’s website is
www.informationcommissioner.gov.uk