The GDPR gives you rights relating to the processing of your personal data, which are:
Right to be informed: individuals must be provided with ‘fair processing information’ through privacy notices. There must be transparency at the point of collection on how the information will be used and there is an emphasis on providing you with clear and concise privacy notices.
Right of access: individuals must be able to access their data to ensure that it is being processed lawfully. This is commonly referred to as a 'subject access request'. Individuals can make a subject access request verbally or in writing. This right always applies, however, there are exemptions, which means you may not always receive all the information we process.
Right to rectification: individuals have the right to have inaccurate personal data rectified or completed if incomplete. This right always applies.
Right to erasure: individuals have the right to have personal information deleted or destroyed. This is also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’. This is not absolute and only applies in certain circumstances.
Right to restrict processing: individuals can request the restriction or suppression of their personal data. This is not absolute and only applies in certain circumstances.
Right to data portability: enables individuals to reuse and transfer their personal data across IT systems for their personal use, from one data controller to another without affecting its usability. This right only applies to information you have given us and in certain circumstances.
Right to object: individuals have the right to object to processing we undertake as part of a public task or in our legitimate interests. This is not absolute and only applies in certain circumstances. Individuals can object to the processing of personal data for direct marketing purposes. They also can object to processing for scientific, historical research or statistical purposes, unless it is necessary for public interest reasons.
Rights in relation to automated decision-making and profiling: automated decision-making is a decision made by automated means without any human involvement. Individuals have the right in certain circumstances not to be subject to a decision based solely on automated processing, including profiling, which significantly affects him or her. Individuals also have the right to understand the reasons behind decisions made by automated processing and the possible consequences of the decisions.
You are usually not required to pay any charge for exercising your rights. You can make a request verbally or in writing and we have one calendar month to respond to you.