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The Complete Guide to Email Disclaimer Laws in the European Union
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EU Directive 2003/58/EC
Introduced in 2007, the EU Directive 2003/58/EC concerns emails sent by European Union companies as part of their business operations. Previous regulations applying to written correspondence by letter or fax were extended to emails and other forms of electronic communication.
The EU Directive 2003/58/EC forced EU companies to be as transparent as possible. Therefore, all business emails were mandated to include a legally binding EU email disclaimer on all emails with the following information:
Each EU Member State had to enforce the directive before 31 December 2006.
Ireland
The EU Directive was implemented by the Minister for Enterprise, Trade & Employment on April 1, 2007. A company's email disclaimer has to include:
Failure to display this information in an email disclaimer constitutes a criminal offense that is subject to a maximum fine of €2,000.
Germany
Gesetz über elektronische Handelsregister und Genossenschaftsregister was implemented on January 1, 2007. It mandates that all corporate email disclaimers include the following:
Failure to comply comes with a maximum fine of €5,000. On another note, privacy statements intended to act unilaterally, confidentiality disclaimers, and liability disclaimers have no legal standing under German law.
France
Enacted on May 9, 2007, Article R 123-237 of the French Commercial Code states that all French companies must have an email disclaimer with the following:
If the corporate body is a commercial company with its registered office overseas, then these have to be included:
Any infringement of these points is subject to a fine of €750 per infringement
Italy
All Italian companies must use an email disclaimer including:
The Netherlands
Dutch law requires every company display their CoC number on all outgoing written communications including email. Failure to comply can result in a fine of up to €16,750 or up to six months imprisonment as it constitutes an economic crime.
Denmark
From May 4, 2006, all Danish companies were required to include the following in an email disclaimer:
The General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) came into place May 25, 2018, superseding the EU Data Protection Directive 95/46/EU. GDPR is an EU law focused on data protection and privacy for individuals in the European Union and the European Economic Area.
The key objective of GDPR is to give individuals control over their personal data. It also ensures companies based both inside and outside the EEA correctly handle the data of individuals living in the EU. Failure to comply with GDPR can result in a fine of 4% of a company's annual turnover or €20 million.
Using an email disclaimer is not a legal requirement of GDPR. However, a disclaimer can actually help companies comply with the regulation more effectively.
For example, an important part of GDPR is email consent. Companies should not email someone who has not actively consented to be contacted. It should also provide a clear way for someone to unsubscribe if they wish. Including an unsubscribe link in email communications allows recipients to opt-out of any communication from your company.
Email disclaimers can also showcase your company's compliance with GDPR by linking to your company's privacy policy. The email recipient will then see the steps you've taken to ensure their personal data is handled securely.
Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) 2004/39/EC
The Markets in Financial Instruments Directive 2004/39/EC came into effect on November 1, 2007, when it replaced the Investment Services Directive (ISD), which directly affects EU financial markets.
MiFID extended the coverage of ISD and introduced new and more extensive requirements that firms have to adapt to. In particular, it focused on their conduct of business and internal organization. The European Commission (EC) revised the Directive, known as MiFID II, and was adopted by the European Parliament on April 15, 2014.
EU Member States were required to implement the MiFID II Directive by June 2016 and the package of measures by January 2017. This was designed to make financial markets more efficient and improve investor protection. This is particularly relevant since in the aftermath of the 2008 recession.
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