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Tag: GDPR

Tag: GDPR
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GDPR right to be forgotten as seen by online personalities

GDPR right to be forgotten will soon enable EU citizens to request online search engines and social media to erase their past online activity and even chase third parties who have replicated it. We explore how GDPR right to be forgotten is seen through the eyes of three people running their successful personal online businesses.

GDPR profiling and automated decision making WP29 Guidelines

Our blog editor Vasiliki Antoniadou explains the latest Article 29 Working Party GDPR profiling guidelines in relation to automated decision making – and how they might affect your business. The technological evolution and specifically the development of big data analytics, IoT and artificial intelligence permit automated processing of personal data in order to evaluate certain

GDPR Data Breach Notification WP29 Guidelines

GDPR data breach notification obligation requires the adoption of appropriate technical and organisational measures in order to ensure the safeguarding of personal data during processing. Since the assessment of the risk degree is not always unequivocal, the Article 29 Data Protection Working Party (WP29) has recently adopted GDPR data breach Guidelines. When unauthorised or unlawful processing

Felicia Yap on iDiaries and our online memory delusions

In Felicia Yap’s speculative world of ‘Yesterday’ , people’s short-term memories are finite – so everyone records their daily experiences on electronic diaries. The Guardian’s Rising Star for Fiction 2017 chats to Aphaia Blog about our online memory delusions. The EU law, including General Data Protection Regulation ( GDPR ) , grants individuals the ‘Right to be Forgotten’ ,

GDPR after Brexit

Our blog editor Vasiliki Antoniadou explores the exchange of position papers between the UK and the European Commission regarding the data protection and GDPR after Brexit . As the time for the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union approaches, the necessary and time consuming negotiation processes in the legislative field commence. Considering that the

GDPR to do list this autumn

GDPR starts to apply less than a year from now – which seems like a reason enough to panic for many data-driven organisations who have so far not addressed the transition to GDPR. But instead of panicking, it may be better to have a look at our autumn GDPR to do list. 1. Map your

Early Data Protection Officer appointment

Although companies are not obliged to appoint a Data Protection Officer before May 2018, we are often asked to already provide Data Protection Officer services now – to help with GDPR implementation. So we started offering ‘ early Data Protection Officer appointment ‘. Early Data Protection Officer appointment means that your appointed Data Protection Officer

UK Data Protection Bill and GDPR

We are often asked by clients and prospects what happens to UK data protection laws after Brexit? Our regular answer ‘not much’ has proven to be correct: the proposed UK Data Protection Bill and GDPR are meant to be aligned with each other. Indeed, anything else would put UK businesses at a disadvantageous position in

GDPR employment data processing explained by WP29

In the run-up to the implementation of the GDPR in 2018, Article 29 Working Party published a detailed Opinion on data processing at work. The text sheds light on key GDPR employment data processing issues. Technological tools of profiling and monitoring employees’ behaviour are plentiful and enable an increasingly intrusive way of monitoring. Some examples

‘GDPR practitioner’ ? I prefer ‘privacy professional’ instead

This article is not about discrediting any GDPR practitioner courses, certifications, or people who are part of them. But emerging privacy profession and data protection professionals need to strive for credibility, starting with clear language.