CML1501 Assignment
2 Semester 2 Due 10
September 2025 |
ANSWERS
NO PLAGIARISM
[Pick the date]
[Type the company name]
,Exam (elaborations)
CML1501 Assignment 2 Semester 2 Due 10
September 2025 | ANSWERS
Course
Communication Law (CML1501)
Institution
University Of South Africa
Book
Communication Law
Communication Law - CML1501 Assignment 2 Semester 2 2025 - Due 10
September 2025; 100 % TRUSTED workings, Expert Solved, Explanations and
Solutions. Assignment 2 EACH QUESTION THATCARRIES (10 MARKS) (IT
MEANS THATEACH ANSWERMUSTBEATLEASTEIGHTLINES)
Question 1 (10 marks) The Protection of Personal Information Act (POPI)
governs the processing of personal data entered into a record by or on
behalf of a responsible party using automated or non-automated methods.-
Whatarethe exceptions in obtaining information of children in terms of the
POPI? Explain your answer.
The Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) of South Africa generally prohibits the
processing of a child's personal information. However, there are specific, limited exceptions that
allow a responsible party to do so. A "child" under POPIA is a person under 18 who is not
legally competent to make their own decisions.
POPIA Exceptions for Processing Children's Information 🧒
A responsible party can process a child's personal information without violating POPIA if one of
the following conditions is met:
Prior Consent: Processing is carried out with the prior consent of a competent person.
A competent person is typically the child's parent, guardian, or any person legally
competent to consent on the child's behalf. This is the most common and straightforward
exception.
Legal Obligation: Processing is necessary for the establishment, exercise, or defense
of a right or obligation in law. This means the processing is required by law, such as a
school needing to process a child's personal information to fulfill its legal duties to
provide education.
, International Public Law: Processing is necessary to comply with an obligation of
international public law. This applies to situations governed by international
agreements or treaties.
Publicly Available Information: The information has been deliberately made public
by the child with the consent of a competent person. An example is a parent allowing
their child to post on social media and the child then makes their personal information
public.
Historical, Statistical, or Research Purposes: The processing is for historical,
statistical, or research purposes. However, this exception has additional requirements:
o The purpose must serve a public interest.
o The processing must be necessary for that purpose.
o It must be impossible or a disproportionate effort to get consent from a
competent person.
o Sufficient safeguards must be in place to ensure the processing does not have a
disproportionately negative effect on the child's individual privacy.
The Role of the Information Regulator
In addition to the above exceptions, the Information Regulator, South Africa's data protection
authority, can authorize a responsible party to process a child's personal information if it is
satisfied that the processing is:
In the public interest.
The responsible party has implemented appropriate safeguards to protect the child's
personal information.
This provides an additional, but less common, avenue for processing children's data when it
serves a broader public good.
The POPI Act and Children’s Information
The Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (POPIA) classifies children’s personal
information (anyone under 18) as “special personal information”, meaning it is subject to
stricter protection.
General Rule: Processing a child’s personal information is prohibited unless specific
exceptions apply (section 35).
Reason: Children are vulnerable and may not fully understand the consequences of their
information being collected and processed.
2 Semester 2 Due 10
September 2025 |
ANSWERS
NO PLAGIARISM
[Pick the date]
[Type the company name]
,Exam (elaborations)
CML1501 Assignment 2 Semester 2 Due 10
September 2025 | ANSWERS
Course
Communication Law (CML1501)
Institution
University Of South Africa
Book
Communication Law
Communication Law - CML1501 Assignment 2 Semester 2 2025 - Due 10
September 2025; 100 % TRUSTED workings, Expert Solved, Explanations and
Solutions. Assignment 2 EACH QUESTION THATCARRIES (10 MARKS) (IT
MEANS THATEACH ANSWERMUSTBEATLEASTEIGHTLINES)
Question 1 (10 marks) The Protection of Personal Information Act (POPI)
governs the processing of personal data entered into a record by or on
behalf of a responsible party using automated or non-automated methods.-
Whatarethe exceptions in obtaining information of children in terms of the
POPI? Explain your answer.
The Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) of South Africa generally prohibits the
processing of a child's personal information. However, there are specific, limited exceptions that
allow a responsible party to do so. A "child" under POPIA is a person under 18 who is not
legally competent to make their own decisions.
POPIA Exceptions for Processing Children's Information 🧒
A responsible party can process a child's personal information without violating POPIA if one of
the following conditions is met:
Prior Consent: Processing is carried out with the prior consent of a competent person.
A competent person is typically the child's parent, guardian, or any person legally
competent to consent on the child's behalf. This is the most common and straightforward
exception.
Legal Obligation: Processing is necessary for the establishment, exercise, or defense
of a right or obligation in law. This means the processing is required by law, such as a
school needing to process a child's personal information to fulfill its legal duties to
provide education.
, International Public Law: Processing is necessary to comply with an obligation of
international public law. This applies to situations governed by international
agreements or treaties.
Publicly Available Information: The information has been deliberately made public
by the child with the consent of a competent person. An example is a parent allowing
their child to post on social media and the child then makes their personal information
public.
Historical, Statistical, or Research Purposes: The processing is for historical,
statistical, or research purposes. However, this exception has additional requirements:
o The purpose must serve a public interest.
o The processing must be necessary for that purpose.
o It must be impossible or a disproportionate effort to get consent from a
competent person.
o Sufficient safeguards must be in place to ensure the processing does not have a
disproportionately negative effect on the child's individual privacy.
The Role of the Information Regulator
In addition to the above exceptions, the Information Regulator, South Africa's data protection
authority, can authorize a responsible party to process a child's personal information if it is
satisfied that the processing is:
In the public interest.
The responsible party has implemented appropriate safeguards to protect the child's
personal information.
This provides an additional, but less common, avenue for processing children's data when it
serves a broader public good.
The POPI Act and Children’s Information
The Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (POPIA) classifies children’s personal
information (anyone under 18) as “special personal information”, meaning it is subject to
stricter protection.
General Rule: Processing a child’s personal information is prohibited unless specific
exceptions apply (section 35).
Reason: Children are vulnerable and may not fully understand the consequences of their
information being collected and processed.