| ▲ | eesmith a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
For the skimmer, the advocacy group was founded by Maximilian Schrems, whose legal cases first got the European Court of Justice to overturn the International Safe Harbor Privacy Principles (which described how a US company could legally store private data on EU citizens), and then got the ECJ to overturn EU–US Privacy Shield, which replaced the Safe Harbor principles. These decisions are known as Schrems I and Schrems II after the founder of this advocacy group. The newest version of that data transfer framework is called the Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework. The European Commission deemed it sufficient, in no small part because they considered it (and more specifically the Data Protection Review Court, an extrajudicial executive branch tribunal) sufficiently independent of the president. However, in January 2025, Trump fired the Democrat members of the review court, leaving it unable to reach quorum to make decisions, which highlighted it wasn't all that independent. Now it's clearly not independent. I don't see how a Schrems III is not in the works. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | maratc a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
You could both be right: Shrems III could be in the works, and TLA could be presenting their legal analysis as an established fact. In other words, (a) no, the "US Supreme Court" didn't "Just Bl[ow] Up EU-US Data Transfers" – there's nothing in the decision even remotely addressing the transfers (nor the EU!) – but (b) the situation might progress in that direction (or it might not.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||