EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Need to Knows
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
- In April 2016, the European Parliament passed the final vote for the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and MEPs agreed to update existing legislation to make it more relevant to modern technology.
While the new laws won’t be enforced for another couple of years, this is still a relatively short period considering businesses will need to get to grips with the new requirements, evaluate their existing security measures and navigate the path to full compliance in that time.
With heavier penalties and a stricter 72-hour breach notification timeline included in the new regulation, we all have an increasing part to play in keeping information secure, responding quickly when a data breach occurs, and answering the requirements of litigation that may arise as a result of a breach.
Watch our panel discussion to gain a new understanding of the language and evidence of IT breaches and learn how to establish a post-breach process through to litigation.
The panel will cover questions such as:
What does it mean for business, law enforcement, and regulators?
What should a company do now with regard to its processes and procedures to ensure compliance?
How will the GDPR encourage innovation and the use of big data?
Good video. Thanks for posting. Very helpful, indeed!
Good talk. Thank! ps. could you please improve the quality of the audio for the next one?
UA-cam BREAKING THE LAW BY BLOCKING MY ACCESS TO MY DATA ON UA-cam , AND IMPLANTING JAVA SCRIPT ON MY BROWSER. I AM ORGANIZING A CLASS ACTION SUIT IN THIS REGARD , GDPR
The legislators have got the penalties completely the wrong way round. It should be pro rata the size of the organisation 'starting at the lessor of 10m euros or 2% not the other way round. Were they asleep when they drafted this clause small businesses make up 95+% of all businesses and legislation should be tailored towards their needs. It is discredited before it has even been implemented. The regulators have once again failed to demonstrate that they actually understand the subject they are regulating and have abandoned a realistic & 'common sense' approach to the problem. But what's new they were told this in 1984. There is a problem and its getting worse but this is not the way to solve it.
It's not about small business, and even if it was then the fixed maximum penalty component was cut by 80% from the Parliament draft anyway. Meanwhile the turnover penalty was cut by only 20%, suggesting the regulators finally understand what they're regulating. The fining criteria make this pretty obvious.
merci beaucoup de savoir votre site
Interesting article on how retailers should be aligning with GDPR - id24.com/retail-aligning-gdpr/
Hello