Bavendiek, KaiKaiBavendiekWittner, FlorianFlorianWittnerSchwaneberg, TheaTheaSchwanebergBehrendt, Christian AlexanderChristian AlexanderBehrendtSchulz, WolfgangWolfgangSchulzFederrath, HannesHannesFederrathSchupp, SibylleSibylleSchuppMueller, TobiasTobiasMueller2019-07-172019-07-172019IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology (562): 345-358 (2019)http://hdl.handle.net/11420/2958The principle of purpose limitation is one of the corner stones in the European General Data Protection Regulation. Automatically verifying whether a software architecture is capable of collecting, storing, or otherwise processing data without a predefined, precise, and valid purpose, and more importantly, whether the software architecture allows for re-purposing the data, greatly helps designers, makers, auditors, and customers of software. In our case study, we model the architecture of an existing medical register that follows a rigid Privacy by Design approach and assess its capability to process data only for the defined purposes. We demonstrate the process by verifying one instance that satisfies purpose limitation and two that are at least critical cases. We detect a violation scenario where data belonging to a purpose-specific consent are passed on for a different and maybe even incompatible purpose.enAutomatically proving purpose limitation in software architecturesConference Paper10.1007/978-3-030-22312-0_24Other