POPULARITY
Des Hogan, Chairperson and Commissioner for the Data Protection Commission discusses the TikTok fine.
CISA urges senior government officials to enhance mobile device security. Russian state-sponsored hacker group Sandworm is targeting Ukrainian soldiers. A website bug in GPS tracking firm Hapn is exposing customer information. Multiple critical vulnerabilities have been identified in Sharp branded routers. Ireland's Data Protection Commission fines Meta $263 million for alleged GDPR violations. Google releases an urgent Chrome security update to address four high-rated vulnerabilities. Cyberattacks on India-based organizations surged 92% year-over-year. Cybercriminals target Google Calendar to launch phishing attacks. Fortinet patches a critical vulnerability in FortiWLM. Juniper Networks warns of a botnet infection targeting routers with default credentials. Our guest is Jeff Krull, principal and practice leader of Baker Tilly's cybersecurity practice, with advice on using employee access controls to limit internal cyber threats. When is “undesirable” a badge of honor? Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn. CyberWire Guest Our guest is Jeff Krull, principal and practice leader of Baker Tilly's cybersecurity practice, talking about using employee access controls to limit internal cyber threats. Selected Reading CISA urges senior government officials to lock down mobile devices amid ongoing Salt Typhoon breach (The Record) Sandworm-linked hackers target users of Ukraine's military app in new spying campaign (The Record) Tracker firm Hapn spilling names of thousands of GPS tracking customers (TechCrunch) Multiple security flaws reported in SHARP routers (Beyond Machines) Meta fined $263 million for alleged GDPR violations that led to data breach (The Record) Update Google Chrome Now—4 New Windows, Mac, Linux Security Warnings (Forbes) India Sees Surge in Banking, Utilities API Attacks (Dark Reading) Google Calendar Phishing Scam Targets Users with Malicious Invites (Hackread) Fortinet Patches Critical FortiWLM Vulnerability (SecurityWeek) Juniper Warns of Mirai Botnet Targeting Session Smart Routers (SecurityWeek) Recorded Future CEO Calls Russia's “Undesirable” Listing a “Compliment” (Infosecurity Magazine) Share your feedback. We want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info. The CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dale Sunderland, Commissioner for Data Protection at the Data Protection Commission on Facebook owner Meta being fined €251m following a personal data breach that impacted around 29 million Facebook accounts globally.
Ian Guider spoke to Matt on Friday's business news about how Meta has been fined €91m by the Data Protection Commission following an investigation into the storage of passwords.Meanwhile, a review by DNG has found that house prices in Dublin have risen by 8.4% over the past 12 months.Hit the ‘Play' button on this page to hear the chat.
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/2ym3ze9y Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com A cyber security notice has been issued to Park Fote customers. Fógra cibearshlándála tugtha do chustaiméirí Pháirc Fhóite. It has emerged that the website of the Foyt Wildlife Park in Co Cork was recently hacked and some customers' bank details may have been stolen. Tá sé tagtha chun solais go ndearnadh cibirionsaí ar shuíomh gréasáin Pháirc Fiadhúlra Fhóite i gCo Chorcaí le gairid agus go bhféadfadh sé gur goideadh sonraí bainc roinnt custaiméirí. Park administrators indicated that customers may have to cancel their credit and debit cards because of the raid. Thug riarthóirí na páirce le fios go mb'fhéidir go gcaithfeadh custaiméirí a gcártaí creidmheasa agus a gcártaí dochair a chur ar ceal mar gheall ar an gcreach. In an email they sent to customers, the administrators said there is a risk that the details of people who made payments on the park's website between 12 May 2024 and 27 August 2024 were stolen. I ríomhphost a sheol siad chuig custaiméirí, dúirt na riarthóiri go bhfuil an baol ann gur goideadh sonraí daoine a rinne íocaíochtaí ar shuíomh gréasáin na páirce idir 12 Bealtaine 2024 and 27 Lúnasa 2024. It was also revealed that the website has since been closed and secured. Tugadh le fios chomh maith go bhfuil an suíomh gréasáin iata agus daingnithe ó shin. The matter has been reported to the Gardai and the Data Protection Commission, and cyber security experts are investigating how the site was said to have been breached. Tá scéal curtha chuig na Gardaí agus chuig an gCoimisiún um Chosaint Sonraí, agus tá saineolaithe cibearshlándála ag fiosrú conas go baileach a bhíothas in ann foghail a dhéanamh ar an suíomh, a dúradh. In the meantime, the Wildlife Park is open as usual and the entrance fee can be paid at the gate. Idir dhá linn, tá an Pháirc Fiadhúlra oscailte mar is gnách agus is féidir an táille iontrála a íoc ag an ngeata. RTÉ News and Current Affairs Nuacht agus Cúrsaí Reatha RTÉ
Meta is to pause its plans to use the personal data of users to train its AI models after some concerns were raised by Ireland's Data Protection Commission. Newstalk's Technology Correspondent, Jess Kelly explains all in this week's 'Tech Check'.All with thanks to Bird & Bird.
Meta is to pause its plans to use the personal data of users to train its AI models after some concerns were raised by Ireland's Data Protection Commission. Newstalk's Technology Correspondent, Jess Kelly explains all in this week's 'Tech Check'.All with thanks to Bird & Bird.
Brian O'Donovan, Work & Technology Correspondent, outlines the main findings in the Data Protection Commission's Annual Report for 2023.
Dale Sutherland, Data Protection Commissioner
E65 The Fifth Court Saoirse Brady, Executive Director of the Irish Penal Reform Trust, joins Peter Leonard BL and Mark Tottenham BL, to talk all things prisons related (including the problems caused by mental health issues in jails - a very, very big problem according to Saoirse). Interestingly, research from Maynooth University is showing that a big majority (9 out of 10) of employers are willing to give ex-prisoners a chance in the workplace, something that may surprise.On the date of recording the Irish Prison System was at 107% capacity.Her recommendations for a book include 'Poor' by Katriona O'Sullivan and 'Just Mercy' by Bryan StevensonAnd, as always, our interlocutors interrogate some recent high profile legal cases from the Decisis.ie casebook:The first case concerns the cost of judicial review where the respondent was a solicitor.The second case concerns fixed penalty notices given out by An Garda Síochána during the Covid lockdownThe third case, in the name of the fada, is about the use of the 'síne fada' (or as Google likes to describe it, 'the long extension'), on websites. A case for the Data Protection Commission. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Data Protection Commission to arrest, and sanction firms flouting regulations
Mountmellick in Co. Laois has been revealed to have more CCTV cameras than any other town in Ireland. But what exactly are the rules around installing a camera in a public place and should we be concerned about these types of cameras being used? Sean was joined by Tony Delaney, Deputy Commissioner of the Data Protection Commission and Dr Kris Shrishak, Technology Fellow at the Irish Council of Civil Liberties to discuss..
Data Protection Commission warns public against unlicensed online loan apps
Mountmellick in Co. Laois has been revealed to have more CCTV cameras than any other town in Ireland. But what exactly are the rules around installing a camera in a public place and should we be concerned about these types of cameras being used? Sean was joined by Tony Delaney, Deputy Commissioner of the Data Protection Commission and Dr Kris Shrishak, Technology Fellow at the Irish Council of Civil Liberties to discuss..
Jess looks back on a tough week for Meta; with a hefty fine from the Data Protection Commission and further job cuts. She also speaks with Ed McLaughlin, the CTO of Mastercard about innovations in the world of payments.
Climate change is one of the themes of this year's World Economic Forum in Switzerland. Markets Correspondent, Joe Brennan, reports from Davos where a recent winter heatwave means the highest town in Europe has significantly less snowfall than usual. The Taoiseach, Finance Minister and a delegation from the IDA are there as part of Ireland's attempt to court FDI. All three parties are awaiting news from Microsoft on how many Irish jobs will be among the plans announced today to cut its workforce by 10,000, globally. Berlin Correspondent, Derek Scally, reports on how Europe's most senior data regulatory body has ruled the Data Protection Commission in Dublin has failed to investigate, with due diligence, data collection and processing at Facebook and Instagram. Critics say that may have deprived the exchequer of a multibillion euro windfall. With any subscription you'll get unlimited access to the very best in unique quality journalism from The Irish Times. Subscribe today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Climate change is one of the themes of this year's World Economic Forum in Switzerland. Markets Correspondent, Joe Brennan, reports from Davos where a recent winter heatwave means the highest town in Europe has significantly less snowfall than usual. The Taoiseach, Finance Minister and a delegation from the IDA are there as part of Ireland's attempt to court FDI. All three parties are awaiting news from Microsoft on how many Irish jobs will be among the plans announced today to cut its workforce by 10,000, globally. Berlin Correspondent, Derek Scally, reports on how Europe's most senior data regulatory body has ruled the Data Protection Commission in Dublin has failed to investigate, with due diligence, data collection and processing at Facebook and Instagram. Critics say that may have deprived the exchequer of a multibillion euro windfall. With any subscription you'll get unlimited access to the very best in unique quality journalism from The Irish Times. Subscribe today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Helen Dixon, Data Protection Commissioner, on fines imposed on Facebook and Instagram following two inquiries into the processing of personal data for the purposes of targeted online advertising.
Jess is joined by Tony Delaney, Deputy Commissioner at the Data Protection Commission to hear how the office works. We hear about BitPanda and Kealan Lennon of CleverCards talks about a successful 2022.
Simon McGarr, Solicitor at McGarr Solicitors and Director of Data Compliance Europe, reacts to a request for the Data Protection Commission to investigate An Garda Síochána over the storage of data of people cleared of crimes.
Mark Zuckerberg has said that Facebook and Instagram might have to shut down operations if there's not a change to EU privacy requirements. It turns out that's not a threat, it's a cry for help. We learn about what might force these platforms out of the EU.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Épisode 813 : Même pendant vos vacances, on vous sert votre veille Social Media sur un podcast ! Ce matin on parle de Birkenstock, d'algorithme antéchronologique, de live shopping TikTok, d'Elon Musk et Twitter, de posts collab sur Twitter aussi, du groupe Méta vs l'Union Européenne et du hack de Disney.Une campagne pour BirkenstockOk c'est pratique et super confortable mais… la Birkenstock embarque avec elle une réputation sulfureuse. La reput' d'être une sandale terriblement moche dont l'esthétique Suisse Allemande suggère davantage le camping et le bbq saucisse que les cocktails et les tapis rouge. C'est un fait.Bin conscient du contexte, Birkenstock lance une campagne qui s'appelle « ugly for a reason ».Moche pour une bonne raison.SourceLa campagne s'articule autour d'un documentaire en 3 parties. Le docu met en lumière l'importance de la santé des pieds.Dans le premier volet du documentaire intitulé “How feet made us human”, Birkenstock revient sur le rôle qu'ont joué les pieds dans l'évolution humaine.Le pied est un outil. C'est pas fait pour être beau c'est fait pour être pratique et ce sont les pieds qui ont joué un rôle majeur dans l'évolution de l'être humain.Birkenstock c'est pareil. C'est moche mais ça marche !Source—Enfin moche, tout dépend.Depuis quelques années Birkenstock n'aura finalement jamais été aussi hype.Si vous jetez un coup d'oeil à leur compte Instagram vous pourriez clairement ganger d'avis sur la marque.J'en veux aussi pour preuve cette autre campagne lancé en parrallèle. #bold.Une nouvelle campagne en collaboration avec des artisans réputés. Sur le compte Instagram de la marque, on trouve des photos reportages et des reels très très cool chez des artisans. Un shaper de planches de surf qui s'appelle James Otter par exemple : SourceLa fin des algorithmes sur les plates-formes ?Quelle blague.Effectivement il se passe quelque chose en ce moment sur les plates-formes puisque sur la plupart des grandes plates-formes social média vous pouvez obtenir un feed antéchronologique.Alors déjà comment ça se passe ?Sur Facebook vous allez l'avoir en haut à gauche sur un onglet avec écrit récent.Si vous cliquez dessus vous allez avoir alors un feed totalement antéchronologique.Sur Instagram même constat.Si la plate-forme a changé son feed pour coller à celui de TikTok il n'en est pas moins possible de sélectionner en cliquant sur le mot Instagram en haut à gauche l'onglet abonnement.Et alors pareil votre feed se mettra en chronologique.On retrouve la même chose sur Twitter.En haut à droite vous avez des petites étoiles scintillantes, cliquez dessus puis sélectionnez "voir plutôt les tous derniers tweets".Pareil vous retrouverez alors votre feed en version chronologique.Moi j'ai l'impression que c'est un leurre.J'ai l'impression qu'à chaque fois que l'algorithme d'une plate-forme change profondément, comme c'est le cas en ce moment par exemple sur Instagram, la plate-forme vous propose à nouveau un feed chronologique à côté pour vous rassurer.Mais déjà un feed chronologique ça peut vite être chiant.Vous allez-vous rendre compte que l'algorithme vous propose quand même majoritairement du contenu que potentiellement vous appréciez.Et puis au final c'est juste pour vous laisser le temps de vous adapter à ce nouveau fonctionnement.D'ailleurs j'ai le sentiment que le nouveau feed Instagram pousse aussi les utilisateurs à plus consommer de Story qu'auparavant.TikTok fait machine arrière sur le live shopping en EuropeIl doit y avoir un truc avec le live shopping en Europe. Une sorte de malédiction.Alors que le social shopping est lancé depuis déjà plusieurs mois aux US côté Instagram et Facebook il reste un projet en Europe.Même constat côté TikTok avec la plateforme qui décide de revoir ses ambitions à la baisse en Europe.TikTok teste le live shopping au Royaume-Uni depuis la fin de l'année 2021. Mais “TikTok Shop” n'aurait pas attiré suffisamment de monde pour s'étendre au reste de l'Europe.TikTok Shop c'est une fonctionnalité de Live Shopping qui permet de rattacher des fonctions de shopping et paiement directement dans l'application.TikTok avait déjà prévu de déployer le live shopping en Allemagne, en France, en Italie et en Espagne. Mais finalement ce sera peut-être pour plus tard.Rappelons qu'en Asie le Live Shopping a déjà plusieurs années d'avance. Selon un rapport du Financial Times, le live shopping aurait permis à Douyin – nom de TikTok en Chine – de tripler ses ventes chaque année pour atteindre en 2022 les 10 milliards de produits. Elon Musk ne rachètera pas Twitter.Ça y est c'est fait, Elon Musk renonce au rachat de Twitter.Pourtant malgré ça, Twitter reste déterminé à vouloir conclure l'accord.Ce ne sont que des postures pour éviter de savoir qui va payer qui.Elon Musk qui a annoncé qu'il avait résilié l'accord de fusion et abandonner les transactions envisagées.Depuis plusieurs semaines il met la pression sur le réseau social pour avoir des informations complémentaires pour valider le rachat.Ses avocats assurent que le réseau social n'a pas respecté ses engagements en donnant pas toutes les informations demandées, notamment sur les faux comptes et les spams.Pourtant de son côté Twitter a répété depuis plusieurs semaines que le nombre de faux comptes sur sa plate-forme est inférieur à 5 %.Elon Musk pense que Twitter ment.Pourtant Twitter avez laissé l'homme et son équipe accéder à toutes les données brutes pour vérifier le nom de utilisateur actif quotidien.Il devait acheter la plate-forme pour 44 milliards de dollars.Alors quelles sont les vraies raisons de ce retournement de situation.Pour pouvoir sortir ces 44 milliards de dollars et racheter la plate-forme Twitter, il avait mis en place un montage financier complexe qui repose notamment sur des prêts gagés sur les actions de Tesla.Problème, la valeur des titres Tesla a énormément baissé suite à son annonce de rachat Twitter.Cette histoire devrait se finir devant les tribunaux puisque les deux parties s'était engagé à devoir verser 1 milliard de dollars s'il revenait en arrière et ne pas signer ce deal.Twitter lance un premier test de tweets collaboratifsDepuis quelques mois, la co-création devient un gros sujet Social Media.Après Instagram et ses posts collaboration, c'est au tour de Twitter de s'y intéresser.Twitter test actuellement un principe de co-tweeting. Il permet aux utilisateurs d'inviter un autre compte à contribuer à un seul tweet.sourceEn gros, 2 personnes partagent le même tweets. Ce tweets est posté sur les 2 compte simultanément.Idéal pour les collaborations d'influenceurs et les tweets en co-branding puisque la portée du contenu est décuplée sur les audiences des deux utilisateurs de l'application.Le co-tweet sera disponible en test sur certains comptes aux États-Unis, au Canada et en Corée.Facebook et Instagram bloqués en Europe dès cet été ?Vous avez peut-être vu passer cette folle rumeur qui annonce que les plates-formes Facebook Instagram seront inaccessibles dès cet été en Europe.On vous rassure ce n'est que des titres pute à clique.Ce qui se passe c'est que au même titre que TikTok qui doit stocker ces informations des citoyens américains aux États-Unis, la Data Protection Commission qui s'occupe de protéger les utilisateurs européens pourrait sévir avec les plates-formes du groupe Méta.Cette commission demande quelque chose de simple, que Facebook et Instagram conservent les données personnelles des citoyens de l'Union Européenne, sur des serveurs en Europe.Aujourd'hui, ces données personnelles sont transférées vers les États-Unis.Pour l'Union Européenne la décision est prise, Méta doit se conformer.La plate-forme américaine a déjà payé des amendes pour ce sujet. Mais comme cela ne suffit pas l'Union Européenne augmente la pression en menaçant de bloquer ses réseaux sociaux de cette année.De son côté Zuckerberg avait annoncé en février 2022 ne pas pouvoir rester en Europe si des règles encadrant les transferts de données volaient en éclats.C'est beaucoup de politique surtout.Sachant aussi que les bureaux de Facebook se trouvent en Irlande.Les deux parties devraient quand même trouver un accord et Méta devra se conformer un jour ou l'autre car il ne perdra jamais un marché aussi grand et notamment capacité d'achat que le marché européen.Disney se fait hacker ses comptes Instagram et FacebookCa arrive même aux meilleurs. Les comptes Facebook et Instagram de Disneyland ont été pris d'assaut par un « super hacker", connu sous le nom de David Do. Le compte Instagram officiel du parc basé à Anaheim compte environ 8,4 millions de followers. Le compte sur Facebook compte plus de 17,2 Millions d'abonnés.Après avoir réussi à cracker les accès aux comptes, le hacker a balancé des posts racistes et injurieux. Pourquoi ? Aucune idée ? Mais gros bordel quand même.Il semblerait que la tactique était un bon vieux phishing à l'ancienne.Comme quoi les vieilles recettes marchent toujours.. . .Le Super Daily est le podcast quotidien sur les réseaux sociaux. Il est fabriqué avec une pluie d'amour par les équipes de Supernatifs.Nous sommes une agence social media basée à Lyon : https://supernatifs.com/. Ensemble, nous aidons les entreprises à créer des relations durables et rentables avec leurs audiences. Ensemble, nous inventons, produisons et diffusons des contenus qui engagent vos collaborateurs, vos prospects et vos consommateurs.
The Data Protection Commission has said sharing nude photos of individuals is criminal and therefore is always ready to ensure that culprits are jailed. According to the Director of Regulatory and Compliance, Dr Patrick Adorno Lebene, a person's video or picture is his or her personal property and therefore sharing nudes without consent is wrong.
Ireland's privacy watchdog has fined Facebook's parent company, Meta, 17 million euros, or about $19 million, for violating Europe's privacy law. The regulator, the Data Protection Commission, has been investigating how Meta Platforms Inc. complied with the requirements of the law, known as General Data Protection Regulation, in how it handled personal data in twelve data breach notifications between June and December 2018. The agency said Tuesday that it found that Meta didn't have the right measures in place to show it could protect EU users' data. “This fine is about record keeping practices from 2018 that we have since updated, not a failure to protect people's information,” the company said in an emailed statement. “We take our obligations under the GDPR seriously, and will carefully consider this decision as our processes continue to evolve.” Under GDPR, the Irish regulator leads cross-border data privacy cases for big tech companies that have their European headquarters in Dublin. It has investigated Meta for a number of data and privacy issues and fined the company's WhatsApp communications service 225 million euros, or $267 million at the time, in September, for another GDPR violation. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
The Data Protection Commission has fined the Bank of Ireland €463,000 after an investigation found thousands of customers’ data had been accidentally altered in such a way that it could have damaged their credit ratings and prevented them from getting loans. Financial expert and advocates for those caught up in the tracker mortgage payments scandal, Pádraic Kissane from Lisselton gives his view to Jerry.
Jess takes a tour of The Masony, a coworking space by Iconic Offices. She chats with Graham Doyle of the Data Protection Commission on comments made by Frances Haugen. Plus Derek Reilly gives first impressions of the new VW ID Buzz.
Businesses without data protection license may not be able to bid for government contracts, a directive from the Data Protection Commission in collaboration with the Public Procurement Authority has indicated. The Data Protection Act mandates all firms to obtain data protection license before beginning operations.
Joe chats to Limerick Solicitor Rossa McMahon about Limerick city and county council being fined €110,000 after multiple breaches of GDPR and data protection regulations relating to its use of CCTV cameras were identified across the city and county by the Data Protection Commission See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We talk to Tony Delaney Deputy Commissioner with the Data Protection Commission.
We talk to Tony Delaney Deputy Commissioner with the Data Protection Commission.
The Department of Social Protection has withdrawn its appeal challenging a Data Protection Commission ruling that the Public Services Card is illegal. The DPC announced this morning that the matter has been resolved, and the Department has acknowledged that the card cannot be made a mandatory requirement for accessing public services “in the absence of legislation”. Gerard Howlin, Columnist with The Sunday Times and Liam Herrick, Executive Director of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, joined Kieran on The Hard Shoulder to discuss...
Coming up in this week's episode: Fitbit, Strava and other fitness apps hit by data breach, FTC updates data rules to include fitness apps, Guernsey Data Regulator says human error most common cause of data breaches, Pension Trustees advised re UK GDPR actions, Estate Agents and the GDPR perils of 360 degree photography, Irish Central Bank breaches Credit Union data, New Zealand Reserve Bank censured by Data Commissioner John Edwards, Suspect arrested after Experian South Africa data breach, French Covid-19 Track and Trace data breach, Anonymous breaches Epik web host data, United Nations data breach continues to give problems, The ongoing Standard Contractual Clauses saga, Irish Civil Liberties deeply critical of Data Protection Commission
LO ÚLTIMO DE TWITTER ES UNA FUNCIÓN QUE BLOQUEA A LOS TROLLS POR TI: ASÍ FUNCIONA EL "MODO SEGURO" Fuente: Xataka https://www.xataka.com/aplicaciones/ultimo-twitter-funcion-que-bloquea-a-trolls-ti-asi-funciona-modo-seguro En su afán por hacer de Twitter una plataforma más sana y con menos interacciones negativas, la compañía ha anunciado una nueva función llamada "modo seguro". En pocas palabras, se trata de un sistema que bloqueará temporal y automáticamente a las cuentas que usan "lenguaje potencialmente dañino, como insultos o comentarios de odio, o las que envían respuestas o menciones repetitivas y no deseadas". Por el momento, esta función estará disponible para un pequeño grupo de usuarios en iOS, Android y la web que usen la app en inglés. No se sabe cuándo se lanzará para todos los usuarios, pero desde Twitter afirman que estudiarán el rendimiento del sistema para mejorarlo y ajustarlo antes de hacerlo. Tal y como detallan desde Twitter, cuando el usuario activa esta función el sistema evalúa la probabilidad de una interacción negativa al "considerar tanto el contenido del tweet como la relación entre el autor del tweet y el que responde". Aquellas cuentas que el usuario siga o con las que interactúe frecuentemente no serán bloqueadas. Cuando el "modo seguro" detecte un perfil potencialmente dañino lo bloqueará automáticamente durante siete días. Eso significa que esa cuenta no podrá ver nuestros tweets, seguirnos o interactuar con nosotros de ninguna manera. Sin embargo, al tratarse de un proceso automático es posible que el sistema falle. Precisamente por ello el usuario podrá ver los autobloqueos y deshacerlos en cualquier momento. De la misma manera, podrá ver los tweets marcados por el "modo seguro", así como los detalles de cada cuenta bloqueada. WHATSAPP, MULTADA CON 225 MILLONES DE EUROS: LA SEGUNDA MAYOR MULTA DE LA HISTORIA DE LA UE EN PROTECCIÓN DE DATOS Fuente: Xataka https://www.xataka.com/privacidad/whatsapp-multada-225-millones-euros-segunda-mayor-multa-historia-ue-proteccion-datos WhatsApp deberá pagar 225 millones de euros por violar la privacidad de los usuarios y romper el Reglamento de Protección de Datos europeo. Así lo ha anunciado la Data Protection Commission, que concluye la investigación iniciada en diciembre de 2018. La organización de Protección de Datos ha concluido que WhatsApp no cumplió sus obligaciones de informar a los usuarios y ser suficientemente transparente, tanto para los propios usuarios de WhatsApp como para aquellos que no utilizan esta aplicación de mensajería. En relación a los datos gestionados entre la propia WhatsApp y Facebook. WhatsApp Ireland Ltd, empresa nacional que gestiona la aplicación en Europa, ha sido la compañía investigada. En respuesta, la comisaria de Protección de Datos, explica que WhatsApp solo proporcionó el 41% de la información prescrita a sus usuarios, pero ninguna a los no usuarios. Un "grave deficit de información" que se traduce en cuatro infracciones del RGPD, definidos por Dixon como "muy serios". Fuentes de la compañía apuntan que esta multa no trata de compartir datos, sino del nivel de detalle que proporcionan en su política de privacidad anterior en 2018. Una política de privacidad que han actualizado desde entonces. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/elgordocircuito/message
Can you claim legal privilege over documents in a Data Protection Commission investigation? How does the DPC assess claims to legal privilege? What, if anything, can we learn about the DPC's developing views on legal privilege from it's 2020 annual report? In this episode, Sinéad Reilly, Professional Support lawyer is joined by Richard Willis, Partner, Litigation, Dispute Resolution and Investigations to answer these questions. Disclaimer: The contents of this podcast are to assist access to information and do not constitute legal or other advice. Specific advice should be sought in relation to specific cases. If you would like more information on this topic, please contact a member of our team or your usual Arthur Cox contact.
What does the 2020 Data Protection Commissions annual report tell us about the approach, the views, the strategy of the Data Protection Commission? To discuss this, Sinéad Reilly is joined by Colin Rooney, a partner in our Technology and Innovation team; Richard Willis, a partner in our Litigation, Dispute Resolution and Investigations team; and Rachel Barry, an associate in our Employment team. Disclaimer: The contents of this podcast are to assist access to information and do not constitute legal or other advice. Specific advice should be sought in relation to specific cases. If you would like more information on this topic, please contact a member of our team or your usual Arthur Cox contact.
To mark International Women's Day, #choosetochallenge, Kathy Jacobs, President of ACOI spoke to Irish female leaders in regulation and legislation about their leadership experiences. Hear from Mary Elizabeth Munn, Director of Credit Institutions Supervision at the Central Bank of Ireland, Jennifer Dolan, Assistant Commissioner with the Data Protection Commission, the DPC's Head of Children's Policy, and Senator Fiona O'Loughlin, Chair of the Oireachtas Education and Skills Committee.
Ahead of International Women's we wanted to share with you a brief snippet of Monday's episode. Our conversation with Mary Elizabeth Munn, Central Bank of Ireland, Jennifer Dolan, Data Protection Commission and Senator Fiona O'Loughlin, Chair of the Oireachtas Education and Skills Committee touched on the values and influences that have carried them through their careers in regulation and legislation. #IWD2021 #choosetochallenge