Il Parlamento Europeo rilancia sulla risoluzione sulla sorveglianza di massa e quindi anche su Safe Harbor. on the follow-up to the European Parliament resolution of 12 March 2014 on the electronic mass surveillance of EU citizens (2015/2635(RSP)) <http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=MOTION&reference=B8-2015-...> [] EU-US umbrella agreement 11. Notes that since the adoption of the resolution the negotiations with the US on the EU-US framework agreement on the protection of personal data when transferred and processed for law enforcement purposes (hereinafter the ‘umbrella agreement’) have been completed and the draft agreement has been initialled; 12. Welcomes the efforts by the US administration to rebuild trust through the umbrella agreement, as well as the fact that the Judicial Redress Act of 2015 has been put before Congress; considers it of paramount importance to ensure the same rights in all the same circumstances of effective judicial redress for EU citizens/individuals whose personal data are processed in the EU and transferred to the US, without any discrimination between EU and US citizens; calls on Congress to pass legislation guaranteeing this; underlines that one prerequisite for signature and conclusion of the umbrella agreement is the adoption of the Judicial Redress Act in the US Congress; Safe Harbour 13. Recalls that the resolution calls for the immediate suspension of the Safe Harbour Decision as it does not provide adequate protection of personal data for EU citizens; 14. Recalls that the Commission addressed 13 recommendations to the US in its communications of 27 November 2013 on the functioning of the Safe Harbour, in order to ensure an adequate level of protection; 15. Welcomes that in its ruling of 6 October 2015 the CJEU declared invalid the Commission Adequacy Decision 2000/520 on the US Safe Harbour; stresses that this ruling has confirmed the long-standing position of Parliament regarding the lack of an adequate level of protection under this instrument; calls on the Commission to immediately take the necessary measures to ensure that all personal data transferred to the US are subject to an effective level of protection that is essentially equivalent to that guaranteed in the EU; 16. Objects to the fact that Parliament has not received any formal communication from the Commission regarding the state of implementation of the 13 recommendations, despite the Commission’s announcement that it would do so by summer 2014; underlines that, following the CJEU’s decision to invalidate Decision 2000/520, it is now urgent that the Commission provide a thorough update on the negotiations thus far and the impact of the judgment on the further negotiations that were announced; invites the Commission to reflect immediately on alternatives to Safe Harbour and on the impact of the judgment on any other instruments under Directive 1995/46/EC for the transfer of personal data to the US, and to report on the matter by the end of 2015; 17. Notes that the suspension of the Safe Harbour Decision has been presented by the Commission as an ‘option’ to be considered if there is no satisfactory solution to the problems identified; invites the Commission to reflect on alternatives to Safe Harbour, and to report on the matter by the end of 2015;