Interested in learning more about getting your cloud-based file storage & sync ready for the GDPR? This free eBook from the cloud encryption company, Tresorit, helps you explore what the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is, what are its requirements for processing person...
What are the GDPR requirements for data controllers and data processors? The GDPR definesdata controllersas entities that make decisions about the means and purposes for which personal data is collected and processed, and it definesdata processorsas entities that process personal data, typically on be...
What Are the Key Requirements of GDPR? The GDPR was built on established and widely accepted privacy principles, such as purpose limitation, lawfulness, transparency, integrity, and confidentiality. It strengthens existing privacy and security requirements, including requirements for notice and consent, ...
GDPR Requirements for U.S. Companies Exceptions to the GDPR for U.S. Businesses Does the GDPR Apply to U.S. Government Agencies? What are the GDPR penalties for U.S. companies? A GDPR Compliance Checklist for U.S. Companies Osano Can Serve as Your GDPR Compliance Partner Sign up for ou...
What are the GDPR requirements for data controllers and data processors? The GDPR definesdata controllersas entities that make decisions about the means and purposes for which personal data is collected and processed, and it definesdata processorsas entities that process personal data, typically on be...
The GDPR defines several roles that are responsible for ensuring compliance: data controller, data processor, and the data protection officer (DPO). The data controller defines how personal data is processed and the purposes for which it is processed. The controller is also responsible...
Businesses, large and small, are in the midst of preparing for compliance with the European Union’s (EU) new data privacy laws: The General Data Protection Regulation, or the GDPR, which will go into effect on May 25, 2018. The GDPR is very broad in scope and can apply to businesses...
it's easy to understand if a small brick and mortar store found it difficult to prepare for GDPR, but research fromThe Ponemon Institutefound that60% of tech companies weren't ready either. So, it's not just small "non-techy" businesses that are behind with GDPR!
GDPR functions as a regulation rather than a directive. Under EU law, regulations are laws that apply to any EU member state and that dictate orders and rules to abide by. A directive, on the other hand, sets out a result to achieve without dictating how to achieve that result. ...
The chapter also concludes that while all organizations dealing in large volumes of personal data will be challenged by GDPR, smaller studios for online game developers are likely to be adversely affected to a greater extent, while "big tech" companies are likely to survive without too much ...