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97 Wash. Univ. L. Rev. Online 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/wshuvylw97 and id is 1 raw text is: 




      Washington University



         Law Review Online



VOLUME  97                                                    2019



  FREE THE DATA! THE SCRAMBLE TO ACCESS
         DATA IN LIGHT OF SCHREMS I & II

                      CHARLOTTE YOUNG

   Maximillian Schrems was a PhD student in Austria when he decided to
participate in a study abroad program with Santa Clara University. While
Schrems was at Santa Clara, Ed Palmari, Facebook's privacy lawyer, spoke
to his class. It was during this lecture that Schrems received the ammunition
that he needed to challenge the legitimacy of EU-U.S. data transfers. Based
on  Palmari's presentation, Schrems believed that Facebook  lacked
complicity of the EU's privacy regulations. Upon his return to the EU,
Schrems took what he learned from Palmari and embarked on litigation that
has challenged the way the U.S. treats data privacy. Schrems's actions have
forced many companies to drastically amend their current business practices
regarding U.S. data transfers from overseas locations. What started with a
harmless study abroad presentation quickly spawned, arguably, the most
influential privacy based litigation for US corporations.

I. THE DIRECTIVE: THE MECHANISM  THAT REGULATES  FOR EU-US  DATA
                            TRANSFERS

   The U.S. and the EU view privacy differently: in the EU, there is a
fundamental right to privacy; whereas, in the U.S., the right to privacy is far
less structured.1 The EU's broad fundamental right to privacy also covers

   1.  The U.S. Supreme Court has failed to take any concrete position on such a right. The Supreme
Court case, Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965), was the first time the United States
recognized a right to privacy. However, Justice White, most famously, grounded his decision in certain


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