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privacy impact assessment (PIA)

By Cameron Hashemi-Pour

What is a privacy impact assessment?

A privacy impact assessment (PIA) is a method for identifying and assessing privacy risks throughout the development lifecycle of a program or system. These assessments state what personally identifiable information (PII) is collected and explain how that information is maintained, protected and shared.

Regardless of where PII is stored, its privacy must be protected from data breaches and other cyberattacks. Information systems must have safeguards, such as PIAs, in place to protect data from privacy violations, especially in situations where privacy issues can be part of the cyberevent.

What's included in a privacy impact assessment?

Privacy impact assessments are mandated for federal government agencies but not usually in the private sector. Industry experts recommend that medium to large organizations that regularly deal in PII conduct regular PIAs as part of their overall data privacy and data governance programs.

A PIA should identify the following:

How is a PIA performed?

PII and related data are typically implemented on a variety of information systems. As a result, an organization's IT department is often the first point of contact for a PIA. Human resources departments also handle a lot of personal data. All systems in development as well as in production are candidates for PIAs.

Templates and software packages are available to assist in developing PIAs. They generally follow these basic steps:

  1. Secure approval from management to conduct a PIA.
  2. Define the purpose and goals of the PIA.
  3. Establish a PIA team to gather data and perform the assessment.
  4. Gather data, such as statistics on data protection activities and systems, types of data stored and how privacy is assured.
  5. Identify the privacy controls to be assessed.
  6. Determine if the assessment will be performed manually using a template or using software designed to perform assessments.
  7. Conduct the assessment, ensuring the controls are addressed and evidence of how privacy is maintained is provided.
  8. Schedule a preliminary review of the draft report with stakeholders.
  9. Complete the report, including updates with amendments from the review process, and present the finished report to management.

Government regulations that require PIAs

Many nations have laws and regulations addressing privacy protections and requiring privacy programs. U.S. government agencies completing PIAs must make the reports available to the public. The following are some significant laws and regulations:

The benefits of conducting PIAs

PIAs bring multiple benefits to organizations tasked with managing and safeguarding PII and other sensitive data. They include the following advantages:

The challenges of conducting PIAs

Organizations opting out of conducting PIAs might have more difficulty detecting data vulnerabilities and their data privacy could be more easily compromised. However, PIAs themselves also pose challenges, including the following:

Privacy impact assessment vs. privacy impact statement

PIAs examine the many aspects of how information is protected, and its privacy assured. The results of privacy risk assessments are presented in a summary report called a privacy impact statement. These statements are a component of the overall PIA.

A privacy impact statement might summarize the ways in which an organization has complied with GDPR, and an agency could request such a statement as verifiable proof of compliance. These reports are valuable tools for compliance.

Data protection impact assessments, or DPIAs, are also used to evaluate potential risks to sensitive information. Learn more with these DPIA tips and templates.

12 Jun 2024

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