Examples of Australian Privacy Act in a sentence
All of Our subcontractors, however, are required to comply with the Australian Privacy Act in relation to the transfer or storage of Personal Information overseas.
The Australian Privacy Act allows you to get access to, and correct, the personal information we hold about you in certain circumstances.
TD365 recognises the importance of your privacy and by the Australian Privacy Act 1988 containing the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs) and the Notifiable Data Breach (NDB) scheme.
You acknowledge that, where you are subject to the Australian Privacy Act, a breach of clause 2 would also involve a breach of Australian Privacy Principle 9.21.
Where such parties are located overseas, you may have rights to enforce such parties' compliance with applicable data protection laws, but you may not have recourse against those parties under the Australian Privacy Act in relation to how those parties treat your personal information.
The PCPD would like to point out that Proposal 40 is modeled on section 52 of the Australian Privacy Act and Proposal 42 is modeled on section 55 of the UK Data Protection Act.
The Australian Privacy Act provides that if conciliation to resolve a complaint fails, the Australian Privacy Commissioner may, (a) make a declaration directing the respondent to take steps remedying the contravention; and (b) award damages to the complainant.
In acting under this Agreement, each party will comply with all obligations imposed on it by any applicable privacy laws, rules and regulations, including The Australian Privacy Act, 1988 (Cth) and the associated Australian Privacy Principles, and will ensure that it has, maintains and complies with a privacy policy providing disclosures, as required by applicable law, of its privacy practices.
Regulations governing our protection of customer data (including sensitive data) include but are not limited to the US Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH), the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the Japanese Act on the Protection of Personal Information (APPI), and the Australian Privacy Act.
The overseas models (such as the European Union Directive 95/46/EC, the UK Data Protection Act 1998, the Australian Privacy Act 1988) impose more stringent requirements for the collection, holding, processing and use of sensitive personal data.