
Asian brands, EVs dominate 2025 Best Buy Awards
The 2025 Best By Awards, announced by Kelley Blue Book, reflect the rapidly shifting landscape of the automotive market not only in the USA, but also elsewhere.
- Industry News
- 17 April 2025
The final Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) came into effect on 1 July 2020 and the countdown timer now counts down to 1 July 2021 for full compliance.
According to Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Head of the Data Privacy Practice at Werksmans, dealers should ensure compliance with the Act sooner rather than later, since the act allows for significant penalties for companies found to be in breach of the law. These include fines up to R10 million and imprisonment.
Ahmore explains that the Act places a positive obligation on dealers to ensure that the comply with the Act when handling personal information. This becomes critical when one considers the volume of information from employees, clients and service providers that pass through a dealership on a regular basis.
The Act requires, among other things, that each business appoint a designated Information Officer, that all personal information is processed in a lawful manner and that the business receives consent (or has another legal ground) from both clients and personnel to handle their personal information.
It is important that companies provide training to all personnel who will handle personal information and put procedures in place to ensure that their processing of both personal information as well as ‘special personal information’ is lawful.
According to Ahmore, the current COVID-19 pandemic has placed the risks related to personal information under the POPI Act in sharp focus.
“Since the start of the lockdown, the number of cybercrimes has increased significantly. Criminals are using hacking, phishing attacks, malware, and ransomware to obtain personal information using COVID-19 as bait, further exposing companies who are storing this personal information.”
She points to the additional burden on companies to process their visitor logs – which constitute personal information under the POPI Act – in a legally responsible manner during lockdown. The visitor logs form part of the government’s contact tracing procedure, but the onus remains on the dealer to store these logs securely, use the information solely for contact tracing and reporting purposes and to de-identify the information in due course.
The 2025 Best By Awards, announced by Kelley Blue Book, reflect the rapidly shifting landscape of the automotive market not only in the USA, but also elsewhere.
Kia took the top honours for the second consecutive year when its all-electric compact crossover was named World Car of the Year during the New York International Auto Show in the USA this week.
The African Association of Automotive Manufacturers (AAAM) is strengthening its commitment to the industrialisation and development of Africa’s automotive sector with the establishment of a new regional office in Tunisia.