When one thinks of a startup privacy policy might not be the very first thing that comes on one’s mind. However, taking data protection and privacy seriously at an early stage is likely to save the founders of tech startups a lot of hassle later.
Privacy and data protection are most often associated with compliance with the relevant legislation. However, once data protection laws such as GDPR start promoting certification and acknowledge that technological reality inevitably limits one’s privacy: Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) starts to kick in.
The tasks of the Data Protection Officer are not to be mistaken for those of the Chief Data Officer or the Information Security Officer. This article gives an overview as to what are the tasks of the Data Protection Officer.
Customer Experience Management (CEM) in Telecoms World Summit 2016 Singapore draws together highly-regarded expert speakers from across the ecosystem of telecommunications industry
GDPR Summary: here is how new EU rules will affect data The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a new set of European legislation designed to reform and harmonise the rules on individuals’ personal data. Ratified by the European Parliament on April 2016, it will enter into force on 2018.
EU Single Market laws that make it easy for London startups to establish, operate and hire will no longer be there after Brexit. I explained to the Shoreditch community how Brexit affects startups.
We decided to publish a Data Protection Act (1998) Summary to help companies assessing their compliance needs in relation to data. The act has a reputation for its complexity: this Summary will provide you with a good knowledge of its key provisions. Who must comply with the Act, and for what?
An explanation of what is the concept of corporate social responsibility (CSR) and why it matters regardless of what you hear about it from multinationals, gurus and critics alike CSR is a funny animal: praised as the solution for the environment in a stateless world. Promoted by MNEs as their plaything to show off with.
According to the latest ECJ judgement involving a dispute between Orange Poska and Polkomtel, Case C‑397/14, resolved by the Polish NRA UKE, an EU Member State may provide, in line with the Universal Service Directive, that an operator of a public electronic communications network must ensure that all end-users are able to access non-geographic numbers on its