Final agreement on the new wording was reached on Friday (25 January). After the draft agreement had been initialled by Malmström on 10 June, MEPs had demanded
changes to the text concerning the bulk transfer of data, the creation of an EU counterpart to the US Terrorist Finance Tracking Programme (TFTP), and EU oversight of TFTP data-processing on US soil.
The three largest political groups in the Parliament – the centre-right EPP, centre-left PES and liberal ALDE – are now in favour of the agreement. In February, the Parliament, using new powers under the EU's Treaty of Lisbon, had rejected an interim agreement on SWIFT transfers.
Over at the Legalift Mathias Vermeulen has a discussion of some of the new restrictions build in to the new agreement, such as a ban on the use of this information for data mining, the possibility of administrative redress for EU citizens and the involvement of Europol in verifying and approving US requests for data.
In its coverage the Register points out that the European Data Protection Supervisor continues to question the need for mass transaction and long term storage of this data, and has additionally called for more oversight.
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