The General Data Protection Regulation (‘GDPR’) is applicable from 25th May 2018 and is designed
to give individuals more control over their personal data.
The key principles under the GDPR are:
Lawfulness, fairness and transparency;
Purpose Limitation;
Data minimisation;
Accuracy;
Storage Limitation;
Integrity and confidentiality;
Accountability
In furtherance with the above principles, the following rights are enshrined within the General Data
Protection Regulation (GDPR) and are available to every individual in relation to their own personal
data.
1) The Right to be Informed
You have the right to receive information relating to the processing of your personal data
and this should be provided to you at the point your personal data is collected.
2) The Right to Access
You have the right to receive a) Confirmation of whether or not personal data concerning
you is being processed; b) Where personal data concerning you is being processed, a copy
of your personal information; c) Where personal data concerning you is being processed,
other additional information as follows: the purpose(s) of the processing; the categories of
personal data; any recipient(s) of the personal data to whom the personal data has or will be
disclosed; the retention period or, if that is not possible, the criteria used to determine the
retention period; the existence of your rights.
3) The Right to Rectification
If your personal data is inaccurate, you have the right to have the data rectified, by the
controller, without undue delay. If your personal data is incomplete, you have the right to
have data completed, including by means of providing supplementary information.
4) The Right to Erasure
This is also known as the ‘right to be forgotten’. You have the right to have your data erased,
without undue delay, by the data controller under certain circumstances.
5) The Right to Data Portability
In some circumstances, you may be entitled to obtain your personal data from a data
controller in a format that makes it easier to reuse your information in another context, and
to transmit this data to another data controller of your choosing without hindrance. This is
referred to as the right to data portability.
6) The Right to Object to Processing
You have the right to object to certain types of processing of your personal data. You have a
stronger right to object to processing of your personal data where the processing relates to
direct marketing.
7) The Right of Restriction
You have a limited right of restriction of processing of your personal data by a data
controller. Where processing of your data is restricted, it can be stored by the data
controller, but most other processing actions, such as deletion, will require your permission.
8) Rights in relation to Automated Decision Making
You have the right to not to be subject to a decision based solely on automated processing.
Processing is “automated” where it is carried out without human intervention and where it
produces legal effects or significantly affects you.
If you wish to exercise any of the above rights, you can contact your Club, County, Province or the
GAA Data Protection Officer on 01 8658600 or dataprotection@gaa.ie.

By gordonmcguirk Tue 1st May