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Indonesia’s Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL)

Operationalize PDPL Compliance with PrivacyOps Platform

Last Updated on julio 14, 2024

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Personal data protection in Indonesia is principally governed by Law No. 27 of 2022, commonly referred to as the Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL). The Indonesia House of Representatives passed the Personal Data Protection Bill on 20 September 2022, and the PDPL subsequently entered into force on 17 October 2022. A two-year grace period is provided for organizations to comply, which means that the PDPL becomes fully enforceable on 17 October 2024.

The law will have an extraterritorial application for international organizations that handle Indonesian citizens’ data or perform data processing acts that have consequences within Indonesia or in relation to Indonesian citizens. Processing involves collecting, analyzing, storing, transferring, or deleting personal data belonging to Indonesian citizens.

It places major obligations upon organizations to ensure their activities comply with the law’s provisions. The PDPL provides a transition period of two years for both data controllers and data processors to adjust their data handling and processing methods in accordance with the new law.

The Solution

Securiti enables organizations to ensure seamless compliance with Indonesia’s PDPL Personal Data Protection Law with AI-driven data discovery, DSR automation, universal consent management, autonomous documented accountability, data breach management, and vendor risk assessment.

Securiti supports enterprises in their journey toward compliance with Indonesia’s PDPL through automation, enhanced data visibility, and identity linking.

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Indonesia PDPL Compliance Solution

See how our comprehensive PrivacyOps platform helps you comply with various sections of Indonesia’s PDPL.

Request a demo today to learn how Securiti can aid you and your organization's compliance efforts.


 

Assess Indonesia’s PDPL Readiness 

Articles: 2, 16, 21, 28, 29, 30, 35, 37, 38, 39, 53, 54

With the help of our multi-regulation, collaborative, readiness, and personal information impact assessment system, you can gauge your organization's posture against Indonesia’s PDPL requirements, identify gaps, and address any risks. Seamlessly expand assessment capabilities across your vendor ecosystem to maintain compliance.

Indonesia PDPL Readiness Assessment
Indonesia PDPL dsr handling

Automate Data Subject Request Handling

Chapter IV

Data subjects have the right to be informed of the use of their personal data and access the data held by an organization. For this purpose, organizations must simplify the initiation of verified DSR requests. Automating the delivery and generation of secure data access reports will significantly reduce the risk of compliance violations and reduce the workforce required to comply with all requests.

Furthermore, create personalized web forms according to your brand style guide with the DSR request format and accept verified data subject rights requests. Automate the initiation of fulfillment workflows when verified requests are received. Automate the delivery and generation of secure data access reports to significantly reduce the risk of compliance violations and reduce the workforce required to comply with all requests.

Secure Fulfillment of Data Access Requests

Articles: 5, 7, 13, 14, 32, 33

Disclosure of information to the data subjects within a limited time frame of receiving a verifiable data request is a must for any organization looking to comply. This will be free of charge and delivered through a secure, centralized portal.

Indonesia PDPL dsr requests
Indonesia PDPL data rectify request

Automate the Processing of Rectification Requests

Articles: 6, 14, 30

With the help of automated data subject verification workflows across all appearances of a subject’s personal data, you can seamlessly fulfill all data rectification requests.

Automate Erasure/Destruction Requests

Articles: 8, 16(1) (f), 16(2)(g), 44, 45, 48(3), 48(4), 57(2)(c)

Fulfill data subjects’ erasure/destruction requests swiftly through automated and flexible workflows.

Indonesia PDPL data erasure request
Indonesia PDPL processing request

Automate Objection and Restriction of Processing Requests

Articles: 10, 11, 34(2)(g), 41

Build a framework for objection and restriction of processing handling based on business requirements with the help of collaborative workflows.

Monitor and Track Consent

Articles: 9, 20(2)(a), 21(1), 22(1), 23, 24, 25(2), 26(3), 40, 43(1)(b), 51(5)

Track consent revocation of data subjects to prevent the transfer or processing of data without their consent. Seamlessly demonstrate consent compliance to regulators and data subjects.

Indonesia PDPL consent preference management
Indonesia PDPL Cookie Consent Preferences

Meet Cookie Compliance

Articles: 9, 20, 25(1)

Automatically scan the web properties within your organization, categorizing tags and cookies. Also, build customizable cookie banners, collect consent, and provide a preference center.

Automate Data Breach Response Notifications

Article: 46

Automates compliance actions and breach notifications to concerned stakeholders about security incidents by leveraging a knowledge database on security incident diagnosis and response.

Indonesia PDPL breach response notification
Indonesia PDPL manage vendor risk

Manage Vendor Risk

Articles: 51, 52

Keep track of privacy and security readiness for all your service providers and processors from a single interface. Collaborate instantly with vendors, automate data requests and deletions, and manage all vendor contracts and compliance documents.

Map Data Flows (Cross-Border Data Transfers) and Generate RoPA Reports

Articles: 31, 32(1), 48, 56, 60(f)

Instantly trace, manage, and monitor data flows on a single interface. Get comprehensive visibility by generating reports of all data points, any cross-border data transfers, vendor contracts, and compliance records.

Indonesia PDPL Data flow Mapping
Indonesia PDPL DPIAs And Risk Assessments

Automate DPIAs and Risk Assessments

Articles: 34(1), 34(3)

Automate the data protection impact assessment process by identifying the risks early on and mitigating them to ensure data security and compliance with the PDPL.

Privacy Policy and Notice Management

Articles: 47

Dynamically update privacy policies and notices to comply with Indonesia’s PDPL. Automate how you publish your privacy notices with the help of pre-built templates to make the process faster. Also, enable centralized management by tracking and monitoring privacy notices in order to maintain compliance.

Indonesia PDPL Privacy Policy Management
Indonesia PDPL personal data monitoring tracking

Continuous Monitoring and Tracking

Articles: 16, 27, 28, 29, 53(1)(b), 54(1)(b), 54(1)(c), 60(j)

Keep a birds-eye view of potential risks against non-compliance to data subjects’ rights by routinely monitoring and scanning personal consumer data.

Data Security and Access Controls

Articles: 16(2)(e), 35, 39

Ensure that the personal data is secured from any unauthorized access, disclosure, alteration or misuse, or deletion before processing such data. Determine the security level and accordingly implement relevant technical and operational measures to protect personal data.

Indonesia PDPL Data Security Controls

Key Rights Under Indonesia’s Draft PDPL

Right to Request/Access Information

The personal data owner has the right to access the personal data held by the personal data controller in accordance with the provisions set under the PDPL. Additionally, they can request information regarding the use and purpose of their personal data and the accountable party requesting it.


Right to Renew/Correct/ Complete Information

The personal data owner has the right to request the completion, renewal, or correction of any mistake or inaccuracy in their personal data according to the set provisions. The data controller is required to do so within 72 hours of receiving such a request.


Right to Terminate/Erasure

The personal data owner has the right to request the termination, erasure, or destruction of their personal data.


Right to Revoke Consent

The personal data owner has the right to revoke their consent at any period in time for the processing of their personal data that has been permitted to the personal data controller.


Right to Object Automated Decision Making

The personal data owner has the right to object to the decision-making, which is based on automatic processing in accordance with personal profiling.


Right to Postpone/Limit

The personal data owner has the right to postpone or limit the processing of their personal data in accordance with the purpose of processing.


Right to File Lawsuit

The personal data owner has the right to file a lawsuit and receive compensation for the violation of their personal data as defined by Article 12 of the PDPL.


Right to Data Portability

All data subjects have the right to obtain a copy of all personal data collected on them by a data controller or processor in a commonly used machine-readable format as provided by Article 13 of the PDPL.


Facts Related to Indonesia’s Personal Data Protection Law

1

 

Organizations are required to appoint a data protection officer in situations where processing of personal data is for public services, the core activities of the controller require constant monitoring of personal data on a large scale or the core activities of the controller relate to large-scale processing of specific personal data or data related to criminal offenses. 

2

In the case of cross-border data transfer, organizations should ensure equivalent or higher data protection measures are in place where data is being sent.

3

The PDPL provides administrative sanctions and penal penalties in case of a personal data breach.   

4

The administrative fines would be a maximum of 2% of annual revenue or an amount determined based on violation variables. Additional punishments may also be imposed in the form of confiscating assets/profits obtained from unlawful activities.

5

Unlawful collection of an individual's personal data is punishable with either imprisonment of a maximum of 5 years or a maximum fine of up to 5 billion rupiahs.

6

The President shall establish a regulatory body to supervise the application of PDPL.

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