We use cookies to give you the best online experience. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies in accordance with our cookie policy. Learn more here.Close Me
Indonesia's Electronic Information Law, Government
Regulation 82 regarding the Implementation of Electronic Systems
and Transactions, and MOCI Regulation 20 regarding the
Protection of Personal Data in Electronic Systems (jointly
referred to as the PDP Regulations) require Electronic System
Providers (ESPs) to adopt an internal policy related to the
protection of personal data for the purpose of, including but
not limited to, acquiring, collecting, processing, analyzing,
storing, dissemination, transmission and destruction of data. This
internal policy shall be drafted as a means to prevent any failure
in the protection of data in their system.
With regard to access, data subjects are granted the right
to:
obtain access or the opportunity to
change or update their personal data without interfering with the
personal data management system, unless otherwise provided by
applicable laws and regulations;
obtain access or the opportunity to
receive the history of their personal data that has been given to
the ESP insofar as it is still in accordance with the applicable
laws and regulations; and
request the destruction of their
personal data in an electronic system managed by the ESP, unless
otherwise determined by the applicable laws and regulations.
The PDP Regulations do not govern the use of data pursuant to
anonymization, de-identification, or pseudonymisation.
Restrictions on or allowances for profiling, automated
decision-making, online monitoring or tracking, Big Data analysis
and artificial intelligence do not exist in the current PDP
Regulations.
The existing PDP Regulations provide for "loss," which
can be loosely translated as "injury" or
"harm," as a ground to file a complaint of an alleged
data breach. However, the PDP Regulations do not define the scope
of the term "loss" for this purpose.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general
guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought
about your specific circumstances.
To print this article, all you need is to be registered on Mondaq.com.
Click to Login as an existing user or Register so you can print this article.
Data Protection refers to the set of privacy laws, policies and procedures that aim to minimise intrusion into one's privacy caused by the collection, storage and dissemination of personal data. Personal data generally refers to the information or data which relate to a person who can be identified from that information or data whether collected by any Government or any private organization or an agency.
There has been a surge in internal and employee-related investigations at an organizational level over the last couple of years.
Some comments from our readers… “The articles are extremely timely and highly applicable” “I often find critical information not available elsewhere” “As in-house counsel, Mondaq’s service is of great value”
Gain access to Mondaq global archive of over 375,000 articles covering 200 countries with a personalised News Alert and automatic login on this device.