Technology can mitigate GDPR compliance risk, says Panasonic
Panasonic Business has stressed the importance of technology ahead of the introduction of new EU
Panasonic Business has stressed the importance of technology ahead of the introduction of new EU
Survey shows confusion around GDPR compliance GDPR compliance is proving to be an obstacle as
Stormshield and Oodrive are pooling their expertise to demonstrate their commitment to Cloud security. Currently,
IBM has announced new incident response capabilities from its IBM Resilient security portfolio, to help companies address the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). These capabilities are designed to help clients rehearse, prepare for and manage the new regulations. GDPR is one of the biggest changes in data privacy law in decades which goes into effect on May 25, 2018.
The prohibitive fines associated with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) are creating a stir, according to D2 Legal Technology. However, despite the high level of potential liability stemming from it, this is an immensely pragmatic regulation that is focused on both safeguarding the rights of the individual to control their personal data, and enabling organisations to utilise that data in a secure and lawful way.
GDPR. Four letters, one colossal shift in privacy compliance for companies around the globe. With organisations collecting increasing amounts of data, customers and the governments that represent them have evolving expectations about the transparency surrounding data collection, and the laws that govern the usage and reporting of it.
It’s estimated that two thirds of organisations have suffered a data breach in the last year but it’s safe to presume that the actual number of cyber attacks is much higher.
Tim Compston, Features Editor at Security News Desk, finds out why V. Miller Newton, President and CEO, of PKWARE – a leading provider of enterprise level smart encryption – and his colleague Matt Little, Product Development VP, are warning that organisations need to start to prepare now for the implications of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) by evaluating their current policies and data protection measures.
A lot can happen in two years. By 2018 we are expected to have witnessed the first human head transplant, Adobe Flash is predicted to be no more, the UK may or may not have left the EU and the flow of data into organisations will have increased by as much as five-fold, according to IDC.
As the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is due to be formally adopted, data privacy & security company, Privitar, has launched a whitepaper [download here] highlighting the key ramifications of the new regulations and how data projects, including those fuelling analytics, machine learning and AI projects will need to be delivered in the future.
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