Consents to receive unsolicited direct marketing material (DPA 1998 and PECR) | Practical Law

Consents to receive unsolicited direct marketing material (DPA 1998 and PECR) | Practical Law

Standard consent clauses for use on websites which collect personal information from visitors to the sites with a view to using this information in the future for the purpose of direct marketing.

Consents to receive unsolicited direct marketing material (DPA 1998 and PECR)

Practical Law UK Standard Clause 5-206-2055 (Approx. 18 pages)

Consents to receive unsolicited direct marketing material (DPA 1998 and PECR)

by Practical Law Data Protection
Law stated as at 15 May 2018United Kingdom
Standard consent clauses for use on websites which collect personal information from visitors to the sites with a view to using this information in the future for the purpose of direct marketing.
Note: With effect from 15 May 2018, this resource is no longer being maintained. From 25 May 2018, the EU General Data Protection Regulation ((EU) 2016/679) (GDPR) replaced the current regime established by the Data Protection Act 1998. It is supplemented by the Data Protection Act 2018. For legal developments between 15 May 2018 and 24 May 2018, please refer to the legal updates on the topic page for this resource: seeGDPR and data protection reform and Direct marketing.
The European Commission is reviewing a related piece of legislation, the E-Privacy Directive (2002/58/EC), implemented in the UK by the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (2003/2426) (as amended) (PECR). Their replacement, the draft E-Privacy Regulation (COM (2017) 10 final) (draft ePR), was not agreed in time to align with the GDPR on 25 May (see Legal update, Government confirms delay to draft E-Privacy Regulation). The Information Commissioner has confirmed that PECR (with GDPR standard of consent) will continue to apply until the draft ePR is finalised. We are updating our direct marketing, cookie and other related resources to reflect this. For further information see E-Privacy Regulation tracker. For further information and ICO guidance, see Practice note, Overview of GDPR: UK perspective: Direct marketing and draft E-Privacy Regulation.