 Fel gwybodaeth iddyn ni newid hun i'r grammar arwain o gelynllain cyfanirol, ac yna gydigau i gydigio gwahanol i'r gwybodaeth cyfanirol yn y cyfanirol. Felly, gydigio gwahanol i gydigio gwahanol i gydigio gwahanol i'r milliards. A'r ddwy i'n mynd yn bwysig o phan continen ac yn mwy o phan yn falch o'u gwahanol i gydigio gwahanol, ac o'r dda llynog, o ddwy ei gwneud hwnnw, o capitalog gan ymlaen yn cael ei ddweud. Yn ymlaen o'r rhan oherwydd, mae'n ddysgu'r ymlaen oherwydd, mae'r byw'r aedlaid o bwyd yn bwrobad, ac mae'r rhan oherwydd i'w'r three elements oherwydd ymlaen i'w rhan oherwydd. Yn ymlaen o'r rhain ymlaen oherwydd, mae'n ddysgu'r rhain oherwydd i ddim yn ymlaen i'r rhain oherwydd, a dim byddai'n rherwydd i'r rhain oherwydd i ddim yn ymlaen i'w rhain oherwydd. Yn 2009, mae'n cyfrifio'r cyrfrydau ar gyfer cyfnodol yn ôl iawn i'r cyfrifio. Those are a number of things. First of all, we have to make it easier for consumers to be able to change their electronic communication provider. We want more competition, we want more energy in the marketplace. So for example they need to be able to transfer their number easily, we put in provisions for that. They need more information about the quality of service they get. What is the real speed of the broadband we are getting? And also they need more pre-contractual information before they make a decision. We do not want them locked in to excessively long contracts because we are at the speed at which technology is advancing a new service office coming in. It is quite clear that the excessively long contracts say longer than two years are often disadvantageous for consumers even dancer offish that they look quite good up front. All of these things are now in, and we are now dependin' on the regulators at national level i weld neitherwch, and we put new provisions for the regulators to collaborate much more closely together through a new body of European regulators and we'll also be putting pressure on them to step up that consumer facing activities. As part of the package whae rwy'o we put through So we had the users rights directive but we also made some important reforms to the so called e-Privacy directive eisiau ystyried tarwch yn gynharu ar gyfer yr unig yn cyd-בהwyr gwylo i fynd i'r bywm ynifieddol mewn siaradau, ac trefnu i'r gwneud i ni gwybod o'r cyfrymain fel yr aeithaith yn gweithio wahanol am gyfriaddio cyfwyr yn cynhyrch ymlaen i bryd i ddechrau'r cyllid yw'r ddataf yn gwneud ar y cyfrifiad ei wörthfu yn ymgyrchu. Mae hyn yn fwy o unrhyw twdd o gwirionedd yw dyleu'r hynod o gyfennol o'r sefydlog Llywodraeth a'r amgylcheddau yma ar wladau i'w ddyn nhw yn bau ahogriol ac mae'r gwerthfawr wedi'u bobl sy'n ei wneud nad oedlai ar cwair yr yna yma. Rwy'n credu i atreddad â'u oedden nhw i oedd yn gweithio'r eich cyffredin air pan速 thosegaf â'r cyffredin sy'n hefyd, ni'n gibwyr arnyn nhw. Roedd y mynd i'r cyffredin, y fan hynny caf oes ystod yn gweithio'r cyffredin. ac y cyfnodd cyd-farn iawn yn gweithio'r cyfnodd dynu'r cyd-farn iawn yn gweithio'r cyd-farn iawn. Mae yna mwy o'i gŷch gwych, ac dyna'n gwych cyd-farn iawn yn gweithio'r cyd-farn iawn, ac mae'n gweithio'r cyd-farn iawn i'r gŷch ar gyfer y dynu, ond mae'r ddataethau throttle yn gweithio'r cyd-farn iawn. Rwyf wedi cael ei wneud i'r cyllid, mae yna'n gallu cyngorol yn cyfrifoedd Cymru. I'm not being involved directly in that because in a way it was not part of my original brief. But I mean I'm happy to be engaged in that process because the debate has gone on between data privacy advocates and national governments. But it seems to me the political intent is very clear and if there are still any concerns we should be getting back to that. And I'm ready to become re-engaged in the debate if necessary. Our data protection, we have to look at the general data protection directive. The first point I would make is that at the moment we do have a fragmented position. For electronic communications providers they're covered by the general provisions of the e-privacy directive. But that doesn't apply to holders of data generally whether it's online or offline. So for example things like data breach notification definitely need to be incorporated into general data protection law. Mrs Redding has indicated that she will take the provisions that we drafted because Parliament drafted those in the e-privacy directive into the more general domain. Now that's just the first point. I think that the real problem that we have is that we do not have a harmonised set of data protection rules across the European Union. And yet in the digital economy and the digital single market and particularly as cloud computing moves forward. So consumers data will be held in different countries and different parts of the cloud that we do need to have a rationalisation of that. And that will mean a move in my view towards common set of rules that will be enforced by regulators nationally on the lines of telecommunications with that network of regulators engaged in working closely together. And so that a company will have a single data controller in one country in the European Union but will then be responsible for data held in every part of the European Union. And there will be an interchange of information between the different regimes. Now I think that's what Mrs Redding may well propose and we're some way from the proposal on reform yet she's consulting on it at the moment. But on the other hand I think the harmonisation rules will remain very difficult to do as we've already seen in my area of consumer protection. That harmonisation that people say well harmonisation is fine but provided it's not at the level that's operated in this country or that country because we think that's too excessive. And consumers in those countries will say well we're going to lose protection. So we have a difficult road ahead on this.