Este post proviene de esta fuente de noticias
Today marks another important date for Europe – the day the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) becomes operational.
For the first time in EU history, an independent European body is given the power to investigate and prosecute criminal offences against the European Union’s financial interests. This is undoubtedly an important and difficult task, which also brings new challenges for the EDPS’ supervision activities.
In the past months, the EDPS has been working closely and constructively with EPPO to safeguard the fundamental rights of individuals when processing their data. As a supervisory authority, the EDPS has done and continues to do its best to help EPPO integrate the data protection rules into its procedures and IT systems.
The EDPS is aware that the complexity of EPPO’s legal landscape will represent continuous challenges. The body’s multi-layered structure and the interplay between the EPPO Regulation and national provisions implementing the law enforcement directive will require coordination between the EDPS and the national data protection authorities.
You can read the Press Statement
- El Chelsea fue sancionado por pagos ocultos en fichajes realizados entre 2011 y 2018
- Anticorrupción investiga una transferencia al exdirector de Carreteras por posible comisión ilegal
- El EDPB pone en marcha su acción coordinada de 2026 sobre transparencia en el RGPD
- La FCA confirma nuevas normas sobre incidentes y terceros para reforzar la resiliencia
- Amla publica su paquete de reporte para probar modelos de evaluación de riesgos
- La UE aprueba sanciones contra 19 responsables y entidades iraníes