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Over 59,000 Personal Data Breaches Reported Across Europe Since Introduction Of GDPR, According To DLA Piper Survey

Date 05/02/2019

  • The Netherlands, Germany And The UK Top Rankings For The Number Of Breach Notifications
  • Report Findings Suggest That Recent EU Commission Figures On Breach Notifications Are Conservative*
  • Disparities Found In Levels Of Reporting Across Eu Member States

Over 59,000 data breach notifications have been reported across the European Economic Area[1] by public and private organizations since the GDPR came into force on 25th May 2018,  according to DLA Piper's GDPR Data Breach survey. The Netherlands, Germany and the UK topped the table in the report with approximately 15,400, 12,600, and 10,600 reported breaches respectively. The lowest numbers of reported breaches were made in Liechtenstein, Iceland and Cyprus with 15, 25 and 35 reported breaches respectively.

The Netherlands, with 89.8 reported breaches per 100,000 people topped the list when the number of notifications were weighted against country populations, followed by Ireland and Denmark. Of the 26 EEA countries where breach notification data is available, the UK, Germany and France ranked tenth, eleventh and twenty-first respectively on a reported fine per capita basis. Greece, Italy and Romania reported the fewest number of breaches per capita. 

According to Ross McKean, a partner at DLA Piper specializing in cyber and data protection: "The GDPR completely changes the compliance risk for organizations which suffer a personal data breach due to revenue based fines and the potential for US style group litigation claims for compensation. As we saw in the US when mandatory breach notification laws came into force, backed up by tough sanctions for not notifying, the GDPR is driving personal data breach out into the open.  Our report confirms this with more than 59,000 data breaches notified across Europe in the first 8 months since the GDPR came into force."

To date 91 fines have been reported.  Not all of these relate to personal data breach and several relate to other infringements of GDPR. The highest GDPR fine imposed to date is €50 million, which was made against Google on 21 January 2019. This was a French decision in relation to the processing of personal data for advertising purposes without valid authorisation, rather than a personal data breach.

Also commenting on the report, Sam Millar, a partner at DLA Piper specializing in cyber and large scale investigations said: "The regulators have already started to flex their muscles with 91 GDPR fines imposed to date but the fine against Google is a landmark moment and is notable partly because it is not related to personal data breach.  We anticipate that regulators will treat data breach more harshly by imposing higher fines given the more acute risk of harm to individuals. We can expect more fines to follow over the coming year as the regulators clear the backlog of notifications." 

The full report DLA PIPER GDPR data breach survey: February 2019 is linked here


[1]   The European Economic Area includes the 28 Member States of the European Union (currently including the UK) plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Background:

*On 25th January 2019 the European Commission reported 41,502 personal data breach notifications for the same period covered by the DLA Piper report.  This figure was based on voluntary contributions from regulators in 21 of the 28 EU Member States while the DLA Piper report covers 26 of the 31 EEA Member States. 

Not all of the 31 EEA Member States make breach notification statistics publicly available. Many have provided statistics for part of the period covered by this report (25 May 2018 to 28 January 2019) so where appropriate figures have been rounded-up and in some cases extrapolated to provide best approximations. 

It was not possible verify if all the reported figures relate to cases post 25 May, when GDPR entered into application. Some of them can also relate to the former data protection directive.