In 1992, Singapore banned the sale of all chewing gum. But if you owned a cornerstore in the U.S. and a Singaporean tourist came to visit your business, there would be nothing to stop you from selling ...
Privacy Shield 2.0 will reinstate a framework for companies in the U.S. to follow to ensure their data processing and transfer activities are compliant with the GDPR ...
With the demise of the cookie being delayed yet again and growing privacy concerns beginning to affect tech giants, what can the industry expect from the recently introduced UK version of GDPR, and ...
As Europe prepares to make way for the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) next week, how will it actually impact consumers? Coming into force on May 25, the General Data Protection ...
After five years of the E.U.’s massive data privacy law in effect, few are happy with the results. The E.U.’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) touts itself as the toughest data privacy ...
What's on the horizon for marketers in terms of GDPR compliance in 2022? A lot, it turns out. Next May will mark four years since the European Union’s comprehensive data privacy law GDPR has been in ...
It’s been slightly more than seven years since GDPR came into force - a key moment that reshaped how organisations approach data protection. We’ve seen UK businesses of all sizes refine their data ...
Given the stupendous amount of personal information stored and transferred online, it's good that regulators are moving to bolster consumer privacy. But these rules – ranging from the "right to be ...
EU privacy watchdog the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) has started examining whether the bloc's top institutions and agencies are effectively protecting citizens' personal data when using ...
Helmed by erratic new owner Elon Musk, Twitter is no longer fulfilling key obligations required for it to claim Ireland as its so-called main establishment under the European Union’s General Data ...
Anyone who uses information requests solely to artificially construct claims for damages later will be out of luck. The ECJ has now ruled on this.