GDPR - Data Processing Agreement

[Updated: July 13th, 2021]


[Contact hello@wyzebulb.com for any questions/comments]


This Data Processing Addendum (“DPA”) forms part of the subscription agreement, Wyzebulb’s Terms of Service available at https://www.wyzebulb.com/terms-of-service/  or other written or electronic agreement (“Agreement”) entered into between Wyzebulb and Customer, pursuant to which Wyzebulb provides Services as defined in the Agreement.


By signing the DPA, Customer enters into this DPA on behalf of itself and, to the extent required under applicable Data Protection Laws, in the name and on behalf of its Controller Affiliates (defined below). For the purposes of this DPA only, and except where indicated otherwise, the term “Customer” shall include Customer and Controller Affiliates. All capitalized terms not defined herein shall have the meaning set forth in the Agreement.


In the course of providing the Services under the Agreement, Wyzebulb may Process certain Personal Data (such terms defined below) on behalf of Customer and where Wyzebulb Processes such Personal Data on behalf of Customer the Parties agree to comply with the terms and conditions in this DPA in connection with such Personal Data.


HOW TO EXECUTE THIS DPA:


(i) Standard Contractual Clauses, attached hereto as  EXHIBIT A.


Appendix A to the Standard Contractual Clauses, which includes specifics on the Personal Data transferred by the data exporter to the data importer.


Appendix B to the Standard Contractual Clauses, which includes a description of the technical and organizational security measures implemented by the data importer as referenced.



1. Definitions

“Controller” means the natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which, alone or jointly with others, determines the purposes and means of the Processing of Personal Data.

“Data Protection Law” means all applicable legislation relating to data protection and privacy including without limitation the EU Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC and all local laws and regulations which amend or replace any of them, including the GDPR, together with any national implementing laws in any Member State of the European Union or, to the extent applicable, in any other country, as amended, repealed, consolidated or replaced from time to time. The terms “process”, “processes” and “processed” will be construed accordingly.

“Data Subject” means the individual to whom Personal Data relates.

“DPA Effective Date” means, as applicable, (a) May 25, 2021 if Customer clicked to accept or the parties otherwise agreed to this DPA prior to or on such date; or (b) the date on which Customer clicked to accept or the parties otherwise agreed to this DPA, if such date is after May 25, 2021.

“GDPR”means the General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data.

“Instruction”means the written, documented instruction, issued by Controller to Processor, and directing the same to perform a specific action with regard to Personal Data (including, but not limited to, depersonalizing, blocking, deletion, making available).

“Personal Data”means any information relating to an identified or identifiable individual where such information is contained within Customer Data and is protected similarly as personal data or personally identifiable information under applicable Data Protection Law

“Personal Data Breach”means a breach of security leading to the accidental or unlawful destruction, loss, alteration, unauthorized disclosure of, or access to, Personal Data transmitted, stored or otherwise processed.

“Processing”means any operation or set of operations which is performed on Personal Data, encompassing the collection, recording, organization, structuring, storage, adaptation or alteration, retrieval, consultation, use, disclosure by transmission, dissemination or otherwise making available, alignment or combination, restriction or erasure of Personal Data.

“Processor”means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which processes Personal Data on behalf of the Controller.

“Standard Contractual Clauses”means the clauses attached hereto as Exhibit 1 pursuant to the European Commission’s decision (C(2010)593) of 5 February 2010 on Standard Contractual Clauses for the transfer of personal data to processors established in third countries which do not ensure an adequate level of data protection.



2. Details of the Processing


Categories of Data Subjects. Controller’s Contacts and other end users including Controller’s employees, contractors, collaborators, customers, prospects, suppliers and subcontractors. Data Subjects also include individuals attempting to communicate with or transfer Personal Data to the Controller’s end users.


Types of Personal Data. Contact Information, the extent of which is determined and controlled by the Customer in its sole discretion, and other Personal Data such as navigational data (including website usage information), email data, system usage data, application integration data, and other electronic data submitted, stored, sent, or received by end users via the Subscription Service.


Subject-Matter and Nature of the Processing. The subject-matter of Processing of Personal Data by Processor is the provision of the services to the Controller that involves the Processing of Personal Data. Personal Data will be subject to those Processing activities as may be specified in the Agreement and an Order.


Purpose of the Processing. Personal Data will be processed for purposes of providing the services set out and otherwise agreed to in the Agreement and any applicable Order.


Duration of the Processing. Personal Data will be processed for the duration of the Agreement, subject to Section 4 of this DPA.



3. Customer Responsibility


Within the scope of the Agreement and in its use of the services, Controller shall be solely responsible for complying with the statutory requirements relating to data protection and privacy, in particular regarding the disclosure and transfer of Personal Data to the Processor and the Processing of Personal Data. For the avoidance of doubt, Controller’s instructions for the Processing of Personal Data shall comply with the Data Protection Law. This DPA is Customer’s complete and final instruction to Wyzebulb in relation to Personal Data and that additional instructions outside the scope of DPA would require prior written agreement between the parties. Instructions shall initially be specified in the Agreement and may, from time to time thereafter, be amended, amplified or replaced by Controller in separate written instructions (as individual instructions).

Controller shall inform Processor without undue delay and comprehensively about any errors or irregularities related to statutory provisions on the Processing of Personal Data.



4. Obligations of Processor


a. Compliance with Instructions. The parties acknowledge and agree that Customer is the Controller of Personal Data and Wyzebulb is the Processor of that data. Processor shall collect process and use Personal Data only within the scope of Controller’s Instructions. If the Processor believes that an Instruction of the Controller infringes the Data Protection Law, it shall immediately inform the Controller without delay. If Processor cannot process Personal Data in accordance with the Instructions due to a legal requirement under any applicable European Union or Member State law, Processor will (i) promptly notify the Controller of that legal requirement before the relevant Processing to the extent permitted by the Data Protection Law; and (ii) cease all Processing (other than merely storing and maintaining the security of the affected Personal Data) until such time as the Controller issues new instructions with which Processor is able to comply. If this provision is invoked, Processor will not be liable to the Controller under the Agreement for any failure to perform the applicable services until such time as the Controller issues new instructions in regard to the Processing.


b. Security. Processor shall take the appropriate technical and organizational measures to adequately protect Personal Data against accidental or unlawful destruction, loss, alteration, unauthorized disclosure of, or access to Personal Data, described under Appendix B to the Standard Contractual Clauses. Such measures include, but are not be limited to:


c. Confidentiality. Processor shall ensure that any personnel whom Processor authorizes to process Personal Data on its behalf is subject to confidentiality obligations with respect to that Personal Data. The undertaking to confidentiality shall continue after the termination of the above-entitled activities.


d. Personal Data Breaches. Processor will notify the Controller as soon as practicable after it becomes aware of any of any Personal Data Breach affecting any Personal Data. At the Controller’s request, Processor will promptly provide the Controller with all reasonable assistance necessary to enable the Controller to notify relevant Personal Data Breaches to competent authorities and/or affected Data Subjects, if Controller is required to do so under the Data Protection Law.


e. Data Subject Requests. Processor will provide reasonable assistance, including by appropriate technical and organizational measures and taking into account the nature of the Processing, to enable Controller to respond to any request from Data Subjects seeking to exercise their rights under the Data Protection Law with respect to Personal Data (including access, rectification, restriction, deletion or portability of Personal Data, as applicable), to the extent permitted by the law. If such request is made directly to Processor, Processor will promptly inform Controller and will advise Data Subjects to submit their request to the Controller. Controller shall be solely responsible for responding to any Data Subjects’ requests. Controller shall reimburse Processor for the costs arising from this assistance.


f. Sub-Processors. Processor shall be entitled to engage sub-Processors to fulfil Processor’s obligations defined in the Agreement only with Controller’s written consent. For these purposes, Controller consents to the engagement as sub-Processors of Processor’s affiliated companies and the third parties listed in Appendix - 3. For the avoidance of doubt, the above authorization constitutes Controller’s prior written consent to the sub-Processing by Processor for purposes of Clause 11 of the Standard Contractual Clauses.


If the Processor intends to instruct sub-Processors other than the companies listed in Appendix - 3, the Processor will notify the Controller thereof in writing (email to the email address(es) on record in Processor’s account information for Controller is sufficient) and will give the Controller the opportunity to object to the engagement of the new sub-Processors within 30 days after being notified. The objection must be based on reasonable grounds (e.g. if the Controller proves that significant risks for the protection of its Personal Data exist at the sub-Processor). If the Processor and Controller are unable to resolve such objection, either party may terminate the Agreement by providing written notice to the other party. Controller shall receive a refund of any prepaid but unused fees for the period following the effective date of termination.


Where Processor engages sub-Processors, Processor will enter into a contract with the sub-Processor that imposes on the sub-Processor the same obligations that apply to Processor under this DPA. Where the sub-Processor fails to fulfil its data protection obligations, Processor will remain liable to the Controller for the performance of such sub-Processors obligations.


Where a sub-Processor is engaged, the Controller must be granted the right to monitor and inspect the sub-Processor’s activities in accordance with this DPA and the Data Protection Law, including to obtain information from the Processor, upon written request, on the substance of the contract and the implementation of the data protection obligations under the sub-Processing contract, where necessary by inspecting the relevant contract documents.


The provisions of this Section 4.6 shall mutually apply if the Processor engages a sub-Processor in a country outside the European Economic Area (“EEA”) not recognized by the European Commission as providing an adequate level of protection for personal data. If, in the performance of this DPA, Wyzebulb transfers any Personal Data to a sub-processor located outside of the EEA, Wyzebulb shall, in advance of any such transfer, ensure that a legal mechanism to achieve adequacy in respect of that processing is in place.


g. Data Transfers. Controller acknowledges and agrees that, in connection with the performance of the services under the Agreement, Personal Data will be transferred to Wyzebulb servers outside EEA. The Standard Contractual Clauses at Exhibit 1 will apply with respect to Personal Data that is transferred outside the EEA, either directly or via onward transfer, to any country not recognized by the European Commission as providing an adequate level of protection for personal data (as described in the Data Protection Law).


g. Deletion or Retrieval of Personal Data. Other than to the extent required to comply with Data Protection Law, following termination or expiry of the Agreement, Processor will delete all Personal Data (including copies thereof) processed pursuant to this DPA. If Processor is unable to delete Personal Data for technical or other reasons, Processor will apply measures to ensure that Personal Data is blocked from any further Processing.


Controller shall, upon termination or expiration of the Agreement and by way of issuing an Instruction, stipulate, within a period of time set by Processor, the reasonable measures to return data or to delete stored data. Any additional cost arising in connection with the return or deletion of Personal Data after the termination or expiration of the Agreement shall be borne by Controller.


5. Audits


Controller may, prior to the commencement of Processing, and at regular intervals thereafter, audit the technical and organizational measures taken by Processor. The cost associated with Audit, including cost of professional services from any third party, will be completely borne by the Controller.


For such purpose, Controller may, e.g.,


obtain information from the Processor,


request Processor to submit to Controller an existing attestation or certificate by an independent professional expert, or


upon reasonable and timely advance agreement, during regular business hours and without interrupting Processor’s business operations, conduct an on-site inspection of Processor’s business operations or have the same conducted by a qualified third party which shall not be a competitor of Processor.


Processor shall, upon Controller’s written request and within a reasonable period of time, provide Controller with all information necessary for such audit, to the extent that such information is within Processor’s control and Processor is not precluded from disclosing it by applicable law, a duty of confidentiality, or any other obligation owed to a third party.


6. General Provisions


With respect to updates and changes to this DPA, the terms that apply in the “Amendment; No Waiver” section of “Miscellaneous” in the Agreement shall apply.


In case of any conflict, this DPA shall take precedence over the regulations of the Agreement. Where individual provisions of this DPA are invalid or unenforceable, the validity and enforceability of the other provisions of this DPA shall not be affected.


Upon the incorporation of this DPA into the Agreement, the parties indicated in Section 7 below (Parties to this DPA) are agreeing to the Standard Contractual Clauses (where and as applicable) and all appendixes attached thereto. In the event of any conflict or inconsistency between this DPA and the Standard Contractual Clauses in Exhibit 1, the Standard Contractual Clauses shall prevail.


Wyzebulb will process Personal Data in accordance with the GDPR requirements contained herein which are directly applicable to Wyzebulb's provision of the Subscription Services.


7. Parties to this DPA


This DPA is an amendment to and forms part of the Agreement. Upon the incorporation of this DPA into the Agreement, Controller and Wyzebulb that are each a party to the Agreement are also each a party to this DPA, and the legal entity agreeing to this DPA as Controller represents that it is authorized to agree to and enter into this DPA solely on behalf of, the Controller.


The parties authorized signatories have duly executed this Data Processing Agreement as of the date set forth below their respective signatures but made effective as of the DPA Effective Date.


CUSTOMER COMPANY NAME:


Signature:


Signatory Name:


Title:


Date:


Wyzebulb (Swincs Consultants Private Limited)


Signature:


Signatory Name:


Title:


Date:

EXHIBIT A – 1 Standard Contractual Clauses (Processors)


For the purposes of Article 26(2) of Directive 95/46/EC for the transfer of personal data to processors established in third countries which do not ensure an adequate level of data protection,


The Customer, as defined in the Wyzebulb Customer Terms of Service (the “data exporter”) with details as follows:


Name of the data exporting organization:   _________________________________________________


Address:   ___________________________________________________________________________


And


Wyzebulb, Swincs Consultants Private Limited, N0 47, 11th main, 27th cross, Banashankari 2nd Stage, Bangalore - 560070 ( the “data importer”),


Each a ‘party’; together ‘the parties’,


WE HAVE AGREED on the following Contractual Clauses (the Clauses) in order to adduce adequate safeguards with respect to the protection of privacy and fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals for the transfer by the data exporter to the data importer of the personal data specified in Appendix 1.


Clause 1


Definitions


For the purposes of the Clauses:


‘personal data’, ‘special categories of data’, ‘process/processing’, ‘controller’, ‘processor’, ‘data subject’ and ‘supervisory authority’ shall have the same meaning as in Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 October 1995 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data;


‘the data exporter’ means the controller who transfers the personal data;


‘the data importer’ means the processor who agrees to receive from the data exporter personal data intended for processing on his behalf after the transfer in accordance with his instructions and the terms of the Clauses and who is not subject to a third country’s system ensuring adequate protection within the meaning of Article 25(1) of Directive 95/46/EC;


‘the Sub-Processor’ means any processor engaged by the data importer or by any other Sub-Processor of the data importer who agrees to receive from the data importer or from any other Sub-Processor of the data importer personal data exclusively intended for processing activities to be carried out on behalf of the data exporter after the transfer in accordance with his instructions, the terms of the Clauses and the terms of the written subcontract;


‘the applicable data protection law’ means the legislation protecting the fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals and, in particular, their right to privacy with respect to the processing of personal data applicable to a data controller in the Member State in which the data exporter is established;


‘technical and organizational security measures’ means those measures aimed at protecting personal data against accidental or unlawful destruction or accidental loss, alteration, unauthorized disclosure or access, in particular where the processing involves the transmission of data over a network, and against all other unlawful forms of processing.


Clause 2


Details of the transfer


The details of the transfer and in particular the special categories of personal data where applicable are specified in Appendix 1 which forms an integral part of the Clauses.


Clause 3


Third-party beneficiary clause


The data subject can enforce against the data exporter this Clause, Clause 4(b) to (i), Clause 5(a) to (e), and (g) to (j), Clause 6(1) and (2), Clause 7, Clause 8(2), and Clauses 9 to 12 as third-party beneficiary.


The data subject can enforce against the data importer this Clause, Clause 5(a) to (e) and (g), Clause 6, Clause 7, Clause 8(2), and Clauses 9 to 12, in cases where the data exporter has factually disappeared or has ceased to exist in law unless any successor entity has assumed the entire legal obligations of the data exporter by contract or by operation of law, as a result of which it takes on the rights and obligations of the data exporter, in which case the data subject can enforce them against such entity.


The data subject can enforce against the Sub-Processor this Clause, Clause 5(a) to (e) and (g), Clause 6, Clause 7, Clause 8(2), and Clauses 9 to 12, in cases where both the data exporter and the data importer have factually disappeared or ceased to exist in law or have become insolvent, unless any successor entity has assumed the entire legal obligations of the data exporter by contract or by operation of law as a result of which it takes on the rights and obligations of the data exporter, in which case the data subject can enforce them against such entity. Such third-party liability of the Sub-Processor shall be limited to its own processing operations under the Clauses.


The parties do not object to a data subject being represented by an association or other body if the data subject so expressly wishes and if permitted by national law.


Clause 4


Obligations of the data exporter


The data exporter agrees and warrants:


That the processing, including the transfer itself, of the personal data has been and will continue to be carried out in accordance with the relevant provisions of the applicable data protection law (and, where applicable, has been notified to the relevant authorities of the Member State where the data exporter is established) and does not violate the relevant provisions of that State;


That it has instructed and throughout the duration of the personal data-processing services will instruct the data importer to process the personal data transferred only on the data exporter’s behalf and in accordance with the applicable data protection law and the Clauses;


That the data importer will provide sufficient guarantees in respect of the technical and organizational security measures specified in Appendix 2 to this contract;


That after assessment of the requirements of the applicable data protection law, the security measures are appropriate to protect personal data against accidental or unlawful destruction or accidental loss, alteration, unauthorized disclosure or access, in particular where the processing involves the transmission of data over a network, and against all other unlawful forms of processing, and that these measures ensure a level of security appropriate to the risks presented by the processing and the nature of the data to be protected having regard to the state of the art and the cost of their implementation;


That it will ensure compliance with the security measures;


That, if the transfer involves special categories of data, the data subject has been informed or will be informed before, or as soon as possible after, the transfer that its data could be transmitted to a third country not providing adequate protection within the meaning of Directive 95/46/EC;


To forward any notification received from the data importer or any Sub-Processor pursuant to Clause 5(b) and Clause 8(3) to the data protection supervisory authority if the data exporter decides to continue the transfer or to lift the suspension;


To make available to the data subjects upon request a copy of the Clauses, with the exception of Appendix 2, and a summary description of the security measures, as well as a copy of any contract for Sub-Processing services which has to be made in accordance with the Clauses, unless the Clauses or the contract contain commercial information, in which case it may remove such commercial information;


That, in the event of Sub-Processing, the processing activity is carried out in accordance with Clause 11 by a Sub-Processor providing at least the same level of protection for the personal data and the rights of data subject as the data importer under the Clauses; and


That it will ensure compliance with Clause 4(a) to (i).


Clause 5


Obligations of the data importer


The data importer agrees and warrants:


To process the personal data only on behalf of the data exporter and in compliance with its instructions and the Clauses; if it cannot provide such compliance for whatever reasons, it agrees to inform promptly the data exporter of its inability to comply, in which case the data exporter is entitled to suspend the transfer of data and/or terminate the contract;


That it has no reason to believe that the legislation applicable to it prevents it from fulfilling the instructions received from the data exporter and its obligations under the contract and that in the event of a change in this legislation which is likely to have a substantial adverse effect on the warranties and obligations provided by the Clauses, it will promptly notify the change to the data exporter as soon as it is aware, in which case the data exporter is entitled to suspend the transfer of data and/or terminate the contract;


That it has implemented the technical and organizational security measures specified in Appendix 2 before processing the personal data transferred;


That it will promptly notify the data exporter about:


Any legally binding request for disclosure of the personal data by a law enforcement authority unless otherwise prohibited, such as a prohibition under criminal law to preserve the confidentiality of a law enforcement investigation;


Any accidental or unauthorized access; and


Any request received directly from the data subjects without responding to that request, unless it has been otherwise authorized to do so;


To deal promptly and properly with all inquiries from the data exporter relating to its processing of the personal data subject to the transfer and to abide by the advice of the supervisory authority with regard to the processing of the data transferred;


At the request of the data exporter to submit its data-processing facilities for audit of the processing activities covered by the Clauses which shall be carried out by the data exporter or an inspection body composed of independent members and in possession of the required professional qualifications bound by a duty of confidentiality, selected by the data exporter, where applicable, in agreement with the supervisory authority;


To make available to the data subject upon request a copy of the Clauses, or any existing contract for Sub-Processing, unless the Clauses or contract contain commercial information, in which case it may remove such commercial information, with the exception of Appendix 2 which shall be replaced by a summary description of the security measures in those cases where the data subject is unable to obtain a copy from the data exporter;


That, in the event of Sub-Processing, it has previously informed the data exporter and obtained its prior written consent;


That the processing services by the Sub-Processor will be carried out in accordance with Clause 11;


To send promptly a copy of any Sub-Processor agreement it concludes under the Clauses to the data exporter.


Clause 6


Liability


The parties agree that any data subject, who has suffered damage as a result of any breach of the obligations, referred to in Clause 3 or in Clause 11 by any party or Sub-Processor is entitled to receive compensation from the data exporter for the damage suffered.


If a data subject is not able to bring a claim for compensation in accordance with paragraph 1 against the data exporter, arising out of a breach by the data importer or his Sub-Processor of any of their obligations referred to in Clause 3 or in Clause 11, because the data exporter has factually disappeared or ceased to exist in law or has become insolvent, the data importer agrees that the data subject may issue a claim against the data importer as if it were the data exporter, unless any successor entity has assumed the entire legal obligations of the data exporter by contract of by operation of law, in which case the data subject can enforce its rights against such entity. The data importer may not rely on a breach by a Sub-Processor of its obligations in order to avoid its own liabilities.


If a data subject is not able to bring a claim against the data exporter or the data importer referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2, arising out of a breach by the Sub-Processor of any of their obligations referred to in Clause 3 or in Clause 11 because both the data exporter and the data importer have factually disappeared or ceased to exist in law or have become insolvent, the Sub-Processor agrees that the data subject may issue a claim against the data Sub-Processor with regard to its own processing operations under the Clauses as if it were the data exporter or the data importer, unless any successor entity has assumed the entire legal obligations of the data exporter or data importer by contract or by operation of law, in which case the data subject can enforce its rights against such entity. The liability of the Sub-Processor shall be limited to its own processing operations under the Clauses.


Clause 7


Mediation and jurisdiction


The data importer agrees that if the data subject invokes against it third-party beneficiary rights and/or claims compensation for damages under the Clauses, the data importer will accept the decision of the data subject:


To refer the dispute to mediation, by an independent person or, where applicable, by the supervisory authority;


To refer the dispute to the courts in the Member State in which the data exporter is established.


The parties agree that the choice made by the data subject will not prejudice its substantive or procedural rights to seek remedies in accordance with other provisions of national or international law.


Clause 8


Cooperation with supervisory authorities


The data exporter agrees to deposit a copy of this contract with the supervisory authority if it so requests or if such deposit is required under the applicable data protection law.


The parties agree that the supervisory authority has the right to conduct an audit of the data importer, and of any Sub-Processor, which has the same scope and is subject to the same conditions as would apply to an audit of the data exporter under the applicable data protection law.


The data importer shall promptly inform the data exporter about the existence of legislation applicable to it or any Sub-Processor preventing the conduct of an audit of the data importer, or any Sub-Processor, pursuant to paragraph 2. In such a case the data exporter shall be entitled to take the measures foreseen in Clause 5(b).


Clause 9


Governing law


The Clauses shall be governed by the law of the Member State in which the data exporter is established.


Clause 10


Variation of the contract


The parties undertake not to vary or modify the Clauses. This does not preclude the parties from adding clauses on business related issues where required as long as they do not contradict the Clause.


Clause 11


Sub-Processing


The data importer shall not subcontract any of its processing operations performed on behalf of the data exporter under the Clauses without the prior written consent of the data exporter. Where the data importer subcontracts its obligations under the Clauses, with the consent of the data exporter, it shall do so only by way of a written agreement with the Sub-Processor which imposes the same obligations on the Sub-Processor as are imposed on the data importer under the Clauses. Where the Sub-Processor fails to fulfil its data protection obligations under such written agreement the data importer shall remain fully liable to the data exporter for the performance of the Sub-Processor’s obligations under such agreement.


The prior written contract between the data importer and the Sub-Processor shall also provide for a third-party beneficiary clause as laid down in Clause 3 for cases where the data subject is not able to bring the claim for compensation referred to in paragraph 1 of Clause 6 against the data exporter or the data importer because they have factually disappeared or have ceased to exist in law or have become insolvent and no successor entity has assumed the entire legal obligations of the data exporter or data importer by contract or by operation of law. Such third-party liability of the Sub-Processor shall be limited to its own processing operations under the Clauses.


The provisions relating to data protection aspects for Sub-Processing of the contract referred to in paragraph 1 shall be governed by the law of the Member State in which the data exporter is established.


The data exporter shall keep a list of Sub-Processing agreements concluded under the Clauses and notified by the data importer pursuant to Clause 5(j), which shall be updated at least once a year.


The list shall be available to the data exporter’s data protection supervisory authority.


Clause 12


Obligation after the termination of personal data-processing services


The parties agree that on the termination of the provision of data-processing services, the data importer and the Sub-Processor shall, at the choice of the data exporter, return all the personal data transferred and the copies thereof to the data exporter or shall destroy all the personal data and certify to the data exporter that it has done so, unless legislation imposed upon the data importer prevents it from returning or destroying all or part of the personal data transferred. In that case, the data importer warrants that it will guarantee the confidentiality of the personal data transferred and will not actively process the personal data transferred anymore.


The data importer and the Sub-Processor warrant that upon request of the data exporter and/or of the supervisory authority, it will submit its data-processing facilities for an audit of the measures referred to in paragraph 1.

APPENDIX A to the Standard Contractual Clauses



This Appendix forms part of the Clauses. The Member States may complete or specify, according to their national procedures, any additional necessary information to be contained in this Appendix.


A. Data exporter


The data exporter is the Customer, as defined in the Wyzebulb Customer Terms of Service (“Agreement”).


B. Data importer


The data importer is Wyzebulb, a global provider of marketing and sales software.


C. Data subjects


Categories of data subjects set out under Section 2 of the Data Processing Agreement to which the Clauses are attached.


D. Categories of data


Categories of personal data set out under Section 2 of the Data Processing Agreement to which the Clauses are attached.


E. Special categories of data (if appropriate)


The parties do not anticipate the transfer of special categories of data.


F. Processing operations


The processing activities set out under Section 2 of the Data Processing Agreement to which the Clauses are attached:

Appendix B to the Standard Contractual Clauses (Technical and Organizational Security Measures)


This Appendix forms part of the Clauses.


Description of the technical and organizational security measures implemented by the data importer in accordance with Clauses 4(d) and 5(c) (or document/legislation attached):


Wyzebulb currently observes the security practices described in this Appendix 2. Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary otherwise agreed to by data exporter, Wyzebulb may modify or update these practices at its discretion provided that such modification and update does not result in a material degradation in the protection offered by these practices. All capitalized terms not otherwise defined herein shall have the meanings as set forth in the Agreement.


a) Access Control


Preventing Unauthorized Product Access


Outsourced processing: Wyzebulb hosts its Service with outsourced cloud infrastructure providers. Additionally, Wyzebulb maintains contractual relationships with vendors in order to provide the Service in accordance with our Data Processing Agreement. Wyzebulb relies on contractual agreements, privacy policies, and vendor compliance programs in order to protect data processed or stored by these vendors.


Physical and environmental security: Wyzebulb hosts its product infrastructure with multi-tenant, outsourced infrastructure providers. The physical and environmental security controls are aligned with SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001, among other standards.


Authentication: Wyzebulb implements a uniform password policy for its customer products. Customers who interact with the products via the user interface must authenticate before accessing non-public customer data.


Authorization: Customer data is stored in multi-tenant storage systems accessible to Customers via only application user interfaces and application programming interfaces. Customers are not allowed direct access to the underlying application infrastructure. The authorization model in each of Wyzebulb’s products is designed to ensure that only the appropriately assigned individuals can access relevant features, views, and customization options. Authorization to data sets is performed through validating the user’s permissions against the attributes associated with each data set.


Application Programming Interface (API) access: Public product APIs may be accessed over secured socket layer (SSL) or Transport Layered Security (TLS) based HTTPS using and security API key only.


Preventing Unauthorized Product Use


Wyzebulb implements industry standard access controls and detection capabilities for the internal networks that support its products.


Access controls: Network access control mechanisms are designed to prevent network traffic using unauthorized protocols from reaching the product infrastructure. The technical measures implemented differ between infrastructure providers and include Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) implementations, security group assignment, and traditional firewall rules.


Intrusion detection and prevention: As part of its commitment to protecting customer data and websites, access to Wyzebulb is aligned with best practice guidelines documented by the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) in the OWASP Top 10 and similar recommendations. Protections from Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks are also incorporated, helping to ensure those customers’ sites and other parts of the Wyzebulb products are available continuously.


Wyzebulb is configured with a combination of industry standard and custom rules that are capable of automatically enabling and disabling of appropriate controls to best protect our customers. We employ tools that actively monitor real-time traffic at the application layer with ability to alert or deny malicious behavior based on behavior type and rate.


Static code analysis: Security reviews of code stored in Wyzebulb’s source code repositories is performed, checking for coding best practices and identifiable software flaws.


Penetration testing: Wyzebulb maintains relationships with industry recognized penetration testing service providers for penetration tests. The intent of the penetration tests is to identify and resolve foreseeable attack vectors and potential abuse scenarios.


iii) Limitations of Privilege & Authorization Requirements


Product access: A subset of Wyzebulb’s employees has access to the products and to customer data via controlled interfaces. The intent of providing access to a subset of employees is to provide effective customer support, to troubleshoot potential problems, to detect and respond to security incidents and implement data security. Access is enabled through “just in time” requests for access; all such requests are logged.


Background checks: All Wyzebulb employees undergo a third-party background check prior to being extended an employment offer, in accordance with the applicable laws. All employees are required to conduct themselves in a manner consistent with company guidelines, non-disclosure requirements, and ethical standards.


b) Transmission Control


In-transit: Wyzebulb makes HTTPS encryption (also referred to as SSL or TLS) available on every one of its login interfaces. Wyzebulb’s HTTPS implementation uses industry standard algorithms and certificates.


All sensitive interactions with the Wyzebulb products (e.g., API calls, login, authenticated sessions to the customer's portal, etc.) are encrypted in-transit with TLS 1.2.


Certain information is encrypted or hashed at rest, based on the sensitivity of the information. For instance, user passwords are hashed. Contact Data like Lead information is encrypted at rest. Other information, like public web content, images, documents are not encrypted at rest.


c) Input Control


Detection: Wyzebulb designed its infrastructure to log extensive information about the system behavior, traffic received, system authentication, and other application requests. Internal systems aggregated log data and alert appropriate employees of malicious, unintended, or anomalous activities. Wyzebulb personnel, including security, operations, and support personnel, are responsive to known incidents.


Response and tracking: Wyzebulb maintains a security incident response and tracking mechanism. Suspected and confirmed security incidents are investigated by security, operations, or support personnel; and appropriate resolution steps are identified and documented. For any confirmed incidents, Wyzebulb will take appropriate steps to minimize product and Customer damage or unauthorized disclosure.


Communication: If Wyzebulb becomes aware of unlawful access to Customer data stored within its products, Wyzebulb will: 1) notify the affected Customers of the incident; 2) provide a description of the steps Wyzebulb is taking to resolve the incident; and 3) provide status updates to the Customer contact, as Wyzebulb deems necessary. Notification(s) of incidents, if any, will be delivered to one or more of the Customer’s contacts in a form Wyzebulb selects, which may include via email or telephone.


d) Availability Control


Wyzebulb maintains business continuity and disaster recovery plans focusing both on preventing outage through redundancy of telecommunications, systems and business operations, and on rapid recovery strategies in the event of an availability or performance issue. Whenever customer-impacting situations occur, Wyzebulb’s goal is to quickly and transparently isolate and address the issue. Identified issues are published on Wyzebulb’s status site and are subsequently updated until the issue is resolved.


Business continuity testing is part of Wyzebulb normal processing. Wyzebulb recovery processes are validated continuously through normal maintenance and support processes. We follow continuous deployment principles and create or destroy many server instances as part of our regular daily maintenance and growth. We also use those procedures to recover from impaired instances and other failures, allowing us to practice our recovery process every day.


Wyzebulb primarily relies on infrastructure redundancy, real time replication and backups. All Wyzebulb product services are built with full redundancy. Server infrastructure is strategically distributed across 2 distinct availability zones within our data center provider.


Wyzebulb ensures data is replicated and backed up in multiple durable data-stores. The retention period of backups depends on the nature of the data. Data is also replicated across data-center availability zones in order to provide fault-tolerance within an availability zone as well as scalability and responsive recovery, when necessary. In addition, the following policies have been implemented and enforced for data resilience:


Customer (production) data is backed up leveraging multiple online replicas of data for immediate data protection. All production databases have no less than 1 primary (master) and 1 replica (slave) copy of the data live at any given point in time. Ten days’ worth of backups is kept for any database in a way that ensures restoration can occur easily.


Because we leverage private cloud services for hosting, backup and recovery, Wyzebulb does not implement physical infrastructure or physical storage media within its products. Wyzebulb does also not generally produce or use other kinds of hard copy media (e.g., paper, tape, etc.) as part of making our products available to our customers.


By default, all backups will be protected through access control restrictions on Wyzebulb product infrastructure networks, access control lists on the file systems storing the backup files and/or through database security protections.