US, EU move toward landmark biometric data sharing deal
4 hours ago
- #Biometric Data Sharing
- #US-EU Border Security
- #Data Privacy Negotiations
- The U.S. and EU are in formal talks for a biometric data-sharing deal, allowing DHS access to EU member states' fingerprint and biometric records for border security.
- This would be the first time the EU grants such data access to a non-EU country, supporting DHS's Enhanced Border Security Partnership program.
- The arrangement enables DHS to query EU databases for travelers, asylum seekers, visa applicants, and others, with matches triggering data transfers.
- EU negotiations focus on balancing data protection and border policy, with a 2025 framework agreement setting legal conditions for transfers.
- Key EU demands include limits on bulk data collection, human oversight, restrictions on sensitive data, controls on third-country transfers, and reciprocity in accessing U.S. databases.
- Challenges include reconciling EU privacy standards with DHS's vision for routine biometric screening, data retention periods, scope of checks, and legal redress under U.S. law.
- Both sides aim for tighter border control, making this a significant transatlantic negotiation that could expand cooperation and set a model for future security arrangements.