To guide professionals in this complex field, the CNIL offers two sets of practical guides:
- The Guides for open data publishers: these guides are designed for government agencies, businesses, and individuals who make personal data available to the public as open data;
- The Guides for reusers of data published on the Internet: these guides are intended for companies that reuse data accessible online for various purposes, such as scientific research or marketing.
The recommendations made within those guides, and designed for government agencies, businesses, and individuals who make personal data available to the public as open data, include guidelines for:
- Identifying the responsibilities of the various parties involved;
- Determining the lawfulness of the processing;
- Informing data subjects;
- Respecting the rights of data subjects;
- Ensuring the relevance, proportionality, accuracy, and security of the processed data.
Finally, the CNIL provides further clarification on several points:
- Reuse of public data: Reusers may generally rely on legitimate interest to reuse data published by government agencies as open data. Furthermore, if email addresses are not available, reusers may also provide public, non-individualized information regarding the existence of the processing, its characteristics, and the rights of the data subjects;
- Business directories: Data subjects must be able to easily remove themselves from or object to being listed in business directories that include ratings and comments from internet users;
- Commercial solicitation: Commercial solicitation without prior consent is permitted when data subjects can reasonably expect it. To this end, the CNIL recommends evaluating several criteria in particular: the purpose of the data reuse, the type of data collected, the possibility for individuals to object to this use by the source site, as well as any restrictions in the privacy policy or terms of use.
In addition, the CNIL plans to expand the “case study” guides to cover new topics. It will also continue to explore scenarios for sharing data with authorized third parties, in accordance with French and European law, such as the Code of Relations between the Public and the Administration, Regulation No. 2022/868 of May 30, 2022, on data governance (“Data Governance Regulation ” or “Data Governance Act”), and Regulation No. 2023/2854 on harmonized rules regarding fair access to and use of data (“Data Regulation” or “Data Act”).