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I dive into the potential impacts of Donald Trump's election victory on indie businesses, especially in the SaaS sector. I discuss the differences between the U.S. and European business environments, noting how higher purchasing power in the U.S. can benefit indie makers. I also touch on corporate tax rates, tariffs, and currency fluctuations. While I acknowledge some possible economic benefits, I raise concerns about the oversimplification of complex political issues and the potential negative consequences on climate change. I encourage listeners to stay informed and engaged in these discussions.Links & Mentions Tools, Websites, and Links- Indie Maker Merch (00:01:20) - https://indiemakermerch.com- My Twitter Handle: https://x.com/wbetiago- Web Summit (00:01:20) Concepts and Terms- SaaS (Software as a Service) (00:04:28)- NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) (00:06:37)- Corporate Tax (00:12:47)- GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) (00:15:10)TiemstampsIntroduction to the Episode (00:00:06) Tiago introduces the podcast episode focusing on the impact of Trump's election on indie businesses.Tiago's Perspective on Trump (00:02:21) Tiago shares he is not a Trump supporter but acknowledges some Republican economic measures.Trump's Election and Media Bias (00:03:31) Tiago discusses the media's biased portrayal of Trump and his election campaign.Business Environment Differences (00:04:28) He reflects on the contrasting business environments in the U.S. and Europe, particularly in purchasing power.Currency Fluctuations Post-Election (00:05:26) Tiago notes the increase in the dollar's value after Trump's election and its impact on his business.NATO and U.S. Influence (00:07:54) Discussion on Trump's stance on NATO and its implications for European countries.Tariffs and Their Effects (00:10:09) Tiago explains Trump's proposed tariffs and their potential impact on international trade.Corporate Tax Reduction (00:12:47) He discusses Trump's plan to lower corporate tax rates and its effects on business investments.OpenAI and Potential Changes (00:15:10) Concerns about how Trump's administration might affect OpenAI and its operations.GDPR and U.S. Business Influence (00:16:25) Tiago raises points about GDPR restrictions and potential changes under U.S. influence.Complexity in Politics (00:17:39) Tiago expresses concern over the oversimplification of complex political issues in current discourse.Concerns About Climate Change (00:22:10) He shares his worries about the lack of focus on climate change in the political landscape.Concerns about Political Climate (00:23:12) Tiago discusses the terrifying impact of political decisions, particularly on climate and societal issues.Indie Makers' Responsibility (00:24:28) Emphasizes the need for indie makers to voice their opinions and engage in complex discussions.Raising Voices Against Simplification (00:25:47) Tiago stresses the importance of combating simplistic rhetoric and encourages thoughtful discourse.Global Perspectives (00:26:56) Briefly reflects on the economic implications for countries like India and invites audience engagement.
In this Audio, we delve into the intricacies of data protection laws by comparing the DPDPA (Data Protection and Privacy Act) and GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Learn the key differences, similarities, and implications for businesses operating under these regulations.
In this Audio, we delve into the intricacies of data protection laws by comparing the DPDPA (Data Protection and Privacy Act) and GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Learn the key differences, similarities, and implications for businesses operating under these regulations.
What is a Data Protection Officer (DPO)? A Data Protection Officer is a professional who ensures that an organization's data processing activities comply with GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and other data protection laws and regulations. They also ensure that the individuals' personal data is collected, processed, and stored securely and legally. Their role includes: Monitoring data processing activities Managing data protection policies Guiding on data protection issues Serving as a contact point for data subjects and regulatory authorities What is the Data Protection Officer (DPO) course with InfosecTrain? The Data Protection Officer (DPO) course from InfosecTrain is intended to teach you the key principles of data protection and privacy, including the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and other relevant regulations. The course can be explicitly beneficial if you are preparing for a DPO role or already holding a DPO position. The course is delivered by experienced instructors who provide participants with one-on-one attention and assistance while providing practical training through case studies and hands-on activities. View More: Why Choose the Data Protection Officer Course with InfosecTrain?
Today, Bea talks to Dr. Asia Biega, a computer scientist and group leader of the Responsible Computing group at the Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy. Her research focuses on responsible computing principles for information access and social computing systems (including search, recommendation, assistive typing, sharing economy, crowdsourcing or social media systems). Bea and Asia discuss about ethical issues when it comes to data collection, data protection laws, design of ethical algorithm, and the challenges in digital well-being. Asia explains what GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is, the importance of interdisciplinary work to achieve responsible computing, why we are collecting much more data than we actually need. Asia also explains how companies collect our data, what transparency techniques are there, and what we can do to protect us from sharing data without knowing it. Asia also gives perspectives about her experience working at Google and Microsoft teams compared to academia. To find out more information about Dr. Asia Biega, check out here: https://www.mpi-sp.org/biega https://asiabiega.github.io/ Asia's Twitter: @asia_biega Asia's mastodon: @asiabiega@fediscience.org Episode Art: Photo by Growtika on Unsplash You can follow us on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/MPPhdnetPodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/offspringmagazine_thepodcast Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/offspring-magazine-the-podcast YouTube: https://youtube.com/c/MaxPlanckPhDnet If you have any feedback, comments, or suggestions, reach out to us at offspring.podcasts@phdnet.mpg.de Check out the Offspring-Blog where we publish articles on a regular basis: https://www.phdnet.mpg.de/outreach/offspring-blog Intro - Outro music composed by Srinath Ramkumar: https://twitter.com/srinathramkumar Pre-Intro jingle composed by Gustavo Carrizo: https://www.instagram.com/carrizo.gus See you soon!
Episode 48 of The Manic Metallic Podcast is a masterclass in branding and visibility, courtesy of multifaceted St. Louis-based fashionpreneur AK Brown.We discuss such topics as:Why we are stronger together in fashion rather than constantly working against each other - AKA, why we need to set our egos aside to achieve positive results for fashionThe concept of a “fraudscape” - and how it has made its way into both the fashion and media landscapeWhy we really, REALLY need to double down on creating websites and newsletters for our businesses - and how to get newsletter subscribersAn argument for counterfeiting and dupes that you would not expectMeta/Facebook's blue check mark monetization initiativeHow to get media visibility - and why it isn't always necessary to have a large audience in order to build partnershipsAnd more!AK'S BIOAK Brown - The Fashion Connector™ is a multifaceted fashionpreneur, fashion expert, thought leader, and connection maker who uses her platform to educate and advocate for other fashion brands, creatives, & businesses. As a St. Louis-based fashion innovator with 10 years of experience, AK has grown her brand through various avenues including the product development, styling, media, non-profit, & educational sectors. She is the founder and CEO of FWRDSociety - the first nonprofit for Black, Brown, & POC fashion creatives and professionals in St. Louis, MO, co-owner of PinkMuse Studio, a fashion editorial studio and magazine, and is an adjunct professor at Stevens - The Institute of Business & Arts. She's been quoted as such in fashion outlets including Teen Vogue, The Zoe Report, InStyle, & Bustle, and has worked with organizations and community leaders locally and nationally, including Cori Bush, Washington University, & MAGIC.RESOURCESUnderstanding the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) rule governing date in the European Union https://www.cjr.org/tow_center_reports/understanding-general-data-protection-regulation.php Edgy Chic Boutique https://edgychicboutique.com/ Style Vault https://thestylevaultboutique.com/ Hustle City: Instagram - @hustl3c1t4_cf Connect With AK Brown:Website: https://www.akbrownstl.com/ Instagram: @akbrownstlPodcast: The Haute Guide https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-haute-guide/id1661230412 PURCHASE "THE MANIC METALLIC GUIDE TO CREATING A FASHION COMPANY"https://manicmetallic.com/product/the-manic-metallic-tech-guide-to-creating-a-fashion-company/ SHOP MANIC METALLIC'S E-COMMERCE STOREhttps://manicmetallic.com/shop/SUPPORT THE MANIC METALLIC PODCAST ($)https://app.redcircle.com/shows/11d2b542-f3b4-4462-b85e-5708034cb823/donationsCONNECT WITH THE MANIC METALLIC PODCASTInstagram: @themanicmetallicpodcastCONNECT WITH MANIC METALLICSubscribe To Our Newsletter: https://bit.ly/manicnewsletterVisit Our Website: https://manicmetallic.com/Follow Us On Instagram: @manicmetallicFollow Us On TikTok: @manicmetallicofficialCONNECT WITH LIBERTYInstagram: @liberty.imhoffWebsite: libertyimhoff.com Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-manic-metallic-podcast/exclusive-content
The European Union's GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) became effective in May 2018. It declared a thorough and far-reaching set of rules for data privacy and became the global leader in how personal data privacy can be regulated and enhanced. What have almost five years shown? Is it successful? Entrenched? A model others follow? And how does it work in practice in 2023? Episode 117 considers how GDPR has become an embedded fabric for how personal information flows – or fails to flow – across borders. While an adopted framework within the EU and affecting global business without regard to borders, GDPR has not been copied everywhere. It varies both from the data localization approach of some countries and from the freer market approach of the United States and other countries. Tune in for what's happening in early 2023 with GDPR and how it has worked in practice. Time Stamps: 01:28 — GDPR Fines 03:36 — United Kingdom privacy regime 04:43 — 2023 examples of laws influenced by GDPR 07:40 — US and EU attempting to create a safe harbor for data transfers between the two 08:23 — Differences between US and Europe regarding privacy 09:30 — Europe's draft data act
Ian Cohen is the Founder and CEO of Lokker, a company committed to protecting businesses from third-party privacy risks. Before Lokker, he served as CEO of Credit.com, where he transformed the company into a trusted high-growth hub for consumers seeking guidance on credit and finance. Ian is also a Board Member of Uqual, an Industry Advisor at Long Ridge Equity Partners, and an Advisor and Investor at PolyScale. In this episode… Data collection has become increasingly obscure, and companies like Meta and Oracle are facing lawsuits for unauthorized data tracking and sharing across third parties. With data sharing largely unregulated among companies, how can you protect customer data? When collecting consumer data, companies often struggle to interpret the data and lack knowledge about its location and usage. With the emergence of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in the US, businesses must go beyond internal privacy programs to regulate external data sharing and comply with the law. Ian Cohen stresses the importance of establishing awareness campaigns and fostering transparency and visibility among third parties. In today's episode of She Said Privacy/He Said Security, Jodi and Justin Daniels host Ian Cohen, Founder and CEO of Lokker, to discuss protecting consumer data from third-party access. Ian explains how Lokker collects and analyzes data, discusses the compliance challenges of third-party data, and offers advice on third-party data sharing.
I always wanted to be a flight attendant and despite making most of my dreams come true, I never was. After the pandemic, when all airlines were desperately looking for staff, my best friend Ruth told me to apply but, hello, I am 62 years old. Even though I knew that I wasn't going to do it, I still did a little research, googled a little here and there and found this amazing young lady:Noémie Frischknecht studied law, then passed the bar exam and worked in two previous legal jobs, before she started working at SWISS in January 2018. This was the time right before the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) came into effect. Noémie had been entrusted with the creation and implementation of a Data Protection Management System within SWISS, which included designing processes, training business units and giving legal advice to SWISS management. Even though Noémie enjoyed her job, she knew, that life is short and that it is up to us to follow our dreams and create a life we love. Being a lawyer in Switzerland pays well and offers a comfortable lifestyle but her NLP trained mind also knows that the comfort zone is where our dreams go to die. She has a website called "Peak-performance - one heart at a time) where she helps people bring out the best in them, no matter at what point they are in life. She took a leap of faith and decided to become a flight attendant because she wants to experience the whole spectrum of life and work with all sorts of different people and see the world even more. She followed the complete training of Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS), learnt that the main priority is safety; she learnt to ditch, firefight and improved her medical knowledge including the ability of performing CPR, which is expected from every Flight Attendant.Now she is flying, she has completed all her training for long haul and short haul flights and whoever has the luck to be a passenger on a flight with Noémie is blessed because she is a very special person.https://peak-performance.org/https://www.instagram.com/arcticflyingfox/
数据改变了人们与世界交互的方式:在数据底座上生长出的移动支付、网络征信、电子商务极大提升了生活的便捷度和生产效率;数字政务、智能城市、SaaS和云计算更是颠覆性地创新了城市治理和企业管理方式。但随之而来,如何合规、审慎地使用和治理数据成为科技伦理的一项重要课题,全球范围内业界正一同探索答案。 本期节目,我们邀请老朋友黄乐平对谈朱莎律师,他们将从个人生活体验出发,聊聊数据如何影响日常生活,给普通人提供一些保护个人信息的实用小技巧,也将在更宏观的视角下探讨数据合规与科技向善为何有利于企业塑造长期价值。朱莎律师在数据合规方面有多年的实践经验和理论研究基础,例如在本期节目中,你将听到她与检察系统合作,作为公益律师发起对直播平台的诉讼,最终促成直播行业上线“青少年模式”的故事。 聊天的人 黄乐平 华泰证券TMT研究组负责人 科技与电子首席分析师 朱莎 垦丁律师事务所高级合伙人 资本市场负责人 时间轴 03:25 欧盟《通用数据保护条例》被视为风向标 04:40 国内对于数据保护的关注从一起电信诈骗案开始 11:40 身为一位母亲,朱律师促成直播平台上线 “青少年模式” 14:45 生物类信息不仅不允许“默许采集”,还必须单独取得同意 17:45 隐私计算,简单来说就是数据匿名化 22:20 大型互联网企业将需要披露数据治理实践 25:20 监管和从业者是一同探索、一同进步的关系 28:00 数据保护做得好,也可以成为企业对外宣传点 泰度小课堂 ESG(Environment、Social responsibility、Corporate Governance,环境、社会责任和公司治理):ESG体系是衡量企业和组织可持续发展绩效的评价体系,可作为企业长期价值的评判依据之一。由于其通用、量化、全面、系统等特征,成为国际上被不同行业普遍认可和接受的评价方法,也是投资机构考察投资标的重要策略。 GDPR(General Data Protection Regulation):欧盟的《通用数据保护条例》,规定了企业对用户的数据收集、存储、保护和使用时新的标准,并也给予了用户更大处理权。 《数据安全法》:2021年6月通过,2021年9月生效实施,是中国关于数据安全的首部律法。 《个人信息保护法》:2021年8月通过,2021年11月生效实施,明确不得过度收集个人信息,维护隐私权益,为公司和行业如何使用个人数据做出法律指导。 徐玉玉电信诈骗案:2016年,山东学生徐玉玉被不法分子以发放助学金的名义,电信诈骗了9900元学费,导致徐玉玉猝死。2017年,徐玉玉案的主犯被判无期徒刑。 人脸识别第一案:2019年,浙江杭州市民郭兵进入杭州某动物园时,认为对方要求刷脸入园的方式侵犯隐私,将动物园告上法庭。这是中国“数字经济背景下人脸识别纠纷第一案”。 守门人规则:《个人信息保护法》第五十八条的“守门人条款“,源自欧盟的《数字市场法案》。这一条款要求明确提供重要互联网平台服务、用户数量巨大、业务类型复杂的个人信息处理者,应当成立外部独立监督机构、制定平台规则、阻断违法活动、定期发布履责报告 延伸阅读 1、华泰 | 科技向善:从愿景到实践 摘要:科技向善是指企业应该在追求利润增长的同时,承担环境保护、健康、教育、就业、隐私保护等更多社会责任,为提高人类生活质量做贡献。在ESG成为全球企业发展和投资重要趋势的大背景下,科技向善正越来越受到企业重视。这篇报告从1)科技向善产生的背景和发展历程,2)科技向善对社会的意义,3)海外及中国企业科技向善进程,以及4)环境、健康、教育、就业、隐私保护等5大方向全面介绍科技向善。 报告发布时间:2022年5月23日 风险提示:疫情对经济冲击影响科技发展速度,规范管理落实不到位。 作者:黄乐平 SAC No.S0570521050001 | SFC No.AUZ066;陈旭东 SAC No.S0570521070004;胡宇舟 SAC No. S0570121040041;黄礼悦 SAC No. S0570121070191;王心怡 SAC No. S0570121070166;陈钰 SAC No.S0570121120092,对本材料的完整理解请以上述研报为准。 2、黄乐平:从达沃斯论坛看全球数字经济发展 (点此跳转至行知观看视频) 制作团队 主编:原瑞阳 项目统筹:韦晔 运营支持:刘诗凡(实习) 制作:高海博 声音设计:马若晨、陆佳杰 节目运营:小米粒 本节目录制于2022年6月7日,本播客不保证节目播出时援引数据信息的及时、准确、完整。 法律声明 本播客不是华泰证券股份有限公司研究报告(下称”华泰证券”)的发布平台,旨在为公众提供宏观、产业、市场热点解读,不构成华泰证券开展证券投资咨询业务或提供任何的投资建议、投资分析意见。本播客不构成任何合同或承诺的基础,不因任何单纯订阅本播客的行为而将订阅人视为华泰证券客户。任何读者在订阅本播客前,请自行评估接收相关推送内容的适当性,且若使用本播客所载内容,务必寻求专业投资顾问的指导及解读。 本播客内容可能涉及华泰证券分析师对华泰证券已发布研究报告的解读,或转发、摘编华泰证券已发布研究报告的部分内容及观点,完整的分析应以报告发布当日的完整研究报告内容为准。订阅者仅使用本播客内容,可能会因缺乏对完整报告的了解或缺乏相关的解读而产生理解上的歧义。如需了解完整内容,请具体参见华泰证券所发布的完整报告。 华泰证券对本播客节目文字、音频、图片、链接等形式所载信息的准确性、可靠性、时效性及完整性不作任何明示或暗示的保证。播客内容所述意见、观点和预测仅作为音频录制日的观点和判断。该等意见、评估及预测无需通知即可随时更改。 在任何情况下,本播客文字、音频、图片、链接等形式所载信息均不构成对任何人的投资建议。订阅者不应单独依靠本播客内容而取代自身独立的判断,应自主做出投资决策并自行承担投资风险。对依据或者使用本播客内容所造成的任何后果,华泰证券及节目嘉宾均不承担任何形式的责任。 本播客所有内容的版权均为华泰证券所有。未经华泰证券书面许可,任何机构和个人不得以任何形式转发、转载或部分转载、发表或引用本播客任何内容。 本节目由华泰证券出品,JustPod制作,小宇宙、喜马拉雅、苹果播客同步上线
Stai ascoltando il recap settimanale gratuito di Ninja PRO, la selezione quotidiana di notizie per i professionisti del digital business. Con Ninja PRO puoi avere ogni giorno marketing insight, social media update, tech news, business events e una selezione di articoli di approfondimento dagli esperti della Redazione Ninja. Vai su www.ninja.it/ninjapro per abbonarti al servizio.Uno degli aspetti più importanti riguarda la tua privacy: è assolutamente necessario che il trattamento di quello che viene definito il "nuovo oro" sia totalmente aderente al GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), la normativa europea probabilmente più stringente a livello globale.Bene, adesso è chiaro che uno tra gli strumenti più utilizzati per la reportistica, Google Analytics, non rispetta alcuni parametri fondamentali di questo regolamento, a causa del trasferimento dei dati negli USA.Sarà sufficiente utilizzare GA4 per sfuggire alla morsa degli enti regolatori? Sì, no, forse. La situazione è in divenire e le risposte di Google al questionario inviato dalla CNIL sono a volte fumose e per niente risolutive.
What role does data and tech play in the future of news? In this episode, we talk to Robin Berjon of The New York Times about why it's important for news and media companies to have a strong data privacy system in place to gain the trust of their users. Listen to Robin discuss how the EU's GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) has pushed the notice and consent model to the limit, why technologists and policymakers have to work together to preserve data privacy and fight misinformation, and why news organizations need to work together to create a more financially sustainable content aggregation platform that benefits both the journalists writing the news and the online platforms sharing the news. Finally, listen to Robin discuss how he's spent his career working on "dumpster fire" hard problems to solve and why that's his advice for young professionals looking for problems to work on today. Guest bio: Robin Berjon is Vice President of Data Governance at The New York Times, where he works on improving privacy and on making sure that the Web can support a thriving media ecosystem. He has worked extensively on technology and Internet governance. Related links: [Proposal] Content Aggregation Technology. Robin Berjon. October 12, 2020. https://discourse.wicg.io/t/proposal-content-aggregation-technology/4941 About the podcast: How Tech Becomes Law is a weekly public interest tech podcast about technology, public policy, and career advice. We are your co-hosts, Jinyan Zang and Dhruv Gupta. Each episode uncovers insights from leaders in government, business, journalism, and academia to highlight how technology can be built in the public interest. Interviewees discuss how technology can move society forward, what role they play in shaping this, and how students and young professionals can impact the path forward. We are supported by the Public Interest Tech Lab. Listen to us on your podcast platform of choice. You can find us online at howtechbecomeslaw.org and on social media channels @techbecomeslaw.
TechSpective Podcast Episode 081 The world of cybersecurity and technology loves acronyms. You have compliance mandates like SOX (Sarbanes-Oxley), HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act), and GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), certifications acronyms like CISSP (Certified Information Systems Security Professional) and CEH (Certified Ethical Hacker), and fun things like ACL (Access Control List), BGP [...] The post Michael Farnum Chats about Cloud Security and Acronym Overload appeared first on TechSpective.
I denne episode skal det handle om GDPR – General Data Protection Regulation, eller databeskyttelsesforordningen på en anelse mere mundret dansk. Vi får besøg af David Junge fra firmaet Data & More, der har analyseret en stor mængde data fra danske virksomheder for at se på om og hvordan de overholder reglerne fra forordningen om beskyttelse af personlige data. David fortæller både om hvilke data der typisk er tale om, hvor de findes (og bliver overset) i virksomhederne, hvordan man finder dem og hvad man kan gøre ved dem. Hør om databomber, sundhedsdata og meget mere, når David Junge besøger DataSnak. Til sidst er der Tiprunde med DR Dokumentar, rumfarts-bog og en vild, indisk nyhedstjeneste. LINKS Data & More-artiklen om analysen af GDPR-data: “Hvad vi lærte om GDPR ved at analysere en milliard datasæt”. Datatilsynet – myter og spørgsmål om GDPR Datatilsynet – de største bøder i Danmark TIPS Jeppe: Video: Hurtige Hænder- Klejtrup Musikefterskole + DR-dokumentarserie om efterskolen Anders: Eric Berger: “Liftoff: Elon Musk and the Desperate Early Days That Launched SpaceX” David: Den vilde indiske nyhedstjeneste Gravitas News - uden respekt for nogetsomhelst. Som modvægt til alle de vante nyhedskilder... PRAKTISK DataSnak har fokus på it-faglige og it-politiske emner, og nørder igennem med alt fra automatisering over sikkerhed til uddannelse i den digitale verden. Podcasten behandler også SAMDATAHKs relevante aktiviteter såsom kurser, faglige initiativer, kommunikation og værktøjer og tilbud, som man kan få, når man er it-medlem i HK. Formål er at gøre lytterne klogere på hvad der sker i deres arbejdsliv her og nu og i fremtiden, og gå i dybden med problemstillinger fra it-professionelles hverdag. Tovholderen på podcasten er it-faglig konsulent Jeppe Engell. De øvrige to værter er Adam Bindslev og Anders Høeg Nissen. DataSnak udkommer hveranden mandag. Tak fordi du lytter med! Får du lyst til at komme med ris og ros, kan du sende en e-mail til jeppe.engell@hk.dk - og hvis du har tekniske spørgsmål eller kommentarer kan de sendes til anders@podlab.dk
Jim Nasr, is the CEO of Acoer, a software development company whose vision, and work is all about building useful, usable, real time technologies that are fundamentally targeted at the healthcare industry. Jim was the former chief software architect at the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the United States. In this podcast we discuss how NFTs and blockchain can be used to empower individual's consent. What is blockchain? Blockchain is a public infrastructure that should be used within the public context. Blockchain provides transparency, auditability and accountability. Blockchain is a layer of trust that can be used to impute trust between parties who don't trust each other. Jim is keen for blockchain to move past the world of cryptocurrencies and proof of concepts. He wants to make blockchain as practical as possible with real practical solutions. Challenges of consent Consent is an element of compliance. In the healthcare industry, when you go see your GP, you fill out paperwork to essentially give them consent to your medical health information for all time. For Jim there are a number of issues with that. It's wrong that the patient doesn't always fully comprehend what they're signing, the process is complicated, it has to be done multiple time and the patient has no rights to say they've changed their mind. Jim gives the example that “if you're my orthopaedic surgeon, you should not have access to my mental health information”. There is a double challenge with regards consent. On one side individuals who sign consent forms have no idea what they have exactly signed, what data is shared and where that agreement is. On the other side organisations have limited idea on who signed what agreements, what data was covered and where the agreements are stored. This creates repetition of the process where the individual is repeatedly asked to sign new consent forms. Dynamic consent is the recognition that consent is not a and done concept, it is more dynamic with potential multiple phases for providing consent with the ability to revoke the consent, where the consent may expire after a certain amount of time and where it could be renewed. Dynamic consent is digital which gives it properties to be tracked and monitored. Data dignity Data has creators like individuals on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter to name a few who create data on those platforms. Essentially, we are implicitly giving those platforms the ability to use this data and along the way we become the product for the “free usage” of that platform. Consumer of those platform are creating content for the platform to leverage in a manner that creates a financial windfall for themselves. The issue is that we as consumers have no say in how that data is marketed and no say on whether firms like Cambridge Analytica use our data and create secondary data markets for themselves. Regulation: GDPR & CCPA Regulation such as GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) provide an important opportunity for regulators to help regulate consent. GDPR gives EU citizens the right to grant access to their information to third parties, including consent and gives them the right to be forgotten. Crucially this regulation carries some serious teeth where the financial penalties for firms who breach GDPR regulation is up to 4% of gross revenue. For example Google has received a fine of €50m, British Airways of €22m and Marriott International of €20m. CCPA is very similar to GDPR in terms of the protection it provides to consumers, in terms of consent and in terms of being fined if firms don't comply. In the healthcare industry there is the Cures Act which gives patients the legal right to get access to their health data from their electronic health record irrespective of the type of app they're using. Components of consent There are multiple components to a consent.
Shadow IT
Accomplishments and learning to cook (3:30)Chicago, Illinois - Gary, Indiana - parents valued education (4:50)Mother’s reading of a book led to initial interest in data privacy issues (5:30)Personal interest and “hobby” is now a career (6:00)The Nazi’s practices gave rise to the undergirding principles of the GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation (7:00)GPDR – EU’s first law that could impose large monetary fines on corporations (7:30)Privacy as a fundamental right – EU and the US (7:55)More details about GPDR’s connection to events of World War II (9:00)High school or college coursework and connections with current events (10:10)Drama courses and the significant impact on life and career (11:40)“A right to be forgotten” (13:10)The GDPR covers individuals when they are in the EU (13:25)An individual’s GDPR rights travel with their data (13:50)What should students learn about data privacy? (14:50)At what age should students learn about data privacy? (16:10)Any tips for parents? (16:20)The need for educators to be aware of data privacy issues (17:55)Avoid the co-mingling of your personal and professional work online (18:45)Use multiple browsers, avoid clicking on links, keep software up to date, reboot your computer regularly (19:20)Passwords, password managers (20:30)FIDO – accessing information without passwords (22:05)Differentiating awareness, information, and detail based on client knowledge and need (24:10)Collect only the data you need (24:45)A teacher who could demystify for their students (26:10)Attention commands attention (26:25)Debbie’s journey to become the Data Diva (27:25)Speaking in the Big Mac room (28:20)The law follows the technology (29:45)Apple’s iOS14 – impact on advertising (30:30)Apps reading your clipboard, including passwords (31:10)Debbie’s mentors and colleagues - Dawid Jacobs, Pia Tesdorf, Emma Lindley (33:00)Fake identities, digital twin, bias in algorithms (33:40)How educational organizations be prepared for the next digital change (35:40)Temperature data, archived information, schools and businesses, transparency (36:00)Facial recognition, bias, false positives, mistaken identity (37:00)Computers only do what the programmers tell the computer to do, industry standards (38:40)People, not statistics – the ripple effects of error rates (39:40)Favorite teacher -high school drama (40:10)Communicate, convey information, and learn how to move through the world (40:30) Debbie Reynolds Consulting Debbie Reynolds LinkedInThe Right to Privacy, by Ellen Alderman and Caroline KennedyEmma Lindley LinkedInPia Tesdorf LinkedInDawid Jacobs LinkedinMusic for Lead. Learn. Change. is Sweet Adrenaline by Delicate BeatsPodcast cover art for Lead. Learn. Change. is a view from Brunnkogel (mountaintop) over the mountains of the Salzkammergut in Austria, courtesy of photographer Simon Berger, published on www.unsplash.com.Professional Association of Georgia EducatorsDavid’s LinkedIn page
Data privacy has often been an after-thought in software and platform development. Data breaches have increased consumer awareness and laws such as GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) have been enacted. Programmers and engineers need to think about what data they are collecting, how it is being stored and accessed, and how it is shared to protect their end users. Today’s guest is Nishant Bhajaria. Nishant leads the technical privacy and strategy teams for Uber that include data scientists, engineers, privacy experts, and others as they seek to improve data privacy for the consumers and the company. Previously, he worked in compliance, data protection and privacy at Google. He was also the head of privacy engineering at Netflix. He is a well-known expert in the field of data privacy, has developed numerous courses on the topic, and has spoken extensively at conferences and on podcasts. Show Notes: [1:09] - Nishant shares his background and how he got started in the field of data privacy. He started at Intel and explains the changes in data collection in the early 2010s. [2:47] - Nishant started in the field “before it was cool,” because of his strengths as an engineer and writer. [3:33] - GDPR stands for General Data Protection Regulation and Nishant describes what this law means and how it came about in Europe. [4:47] - CCPA is the US’s approach and first step into data privacy laws. [5:53] - Consent is going to be a big topic in 2021. Nishant describes how the events of the last decade have led to data privacy laws. [6:56] - Nishant points out that a problem with data privacy laws as they stand right now is that they are not written by people who have the technological and engineering background. [8:39] - The data privacy issues that have arisen in recent years did not happen all of a sudden. Nishant explains that many mistakes across the board have led to them. [9:00] - Nishant lists some of the conundrums and ethical questions that come up when discussing data privacy. [10:23] - One of the biggest problems with data privacy is the different understanding of what that means. European countries and the United States do not have the same understanding of what privacy is. [11:46] - Security features exist for very good reasons, but people are generally very impatient with them. [12:12] - Nishant gives an example of microdecisions that come in to play when data gets into the hands of the wrong person. [14:17] - Nishant gives an example of how some decisions, made by companies in response to GDPR, are making sure they are in compliance but are not always consumer friendly due to a lack of understanding of the law. [15:56] - The internet was not designed with privacy in mind. Privacy was an afterthought. [17:06] - Nishant describes the challenges that we face when consumers want to access apps and sites quickly and the domino effect that takes place. [18:29] - There was a huge systemic change in the workforce in the field of data privacy and data collection that Nishant describes was due to most people joining this career after 2009. [19:43] - A problem arose when engineers would think that they were always the ethical ones because they were collecting data or designing apps and platforms to collect data for the right reasons. But that isn’t always how that data is used. More to Nishant’s point that data collection needs to be regulated from the get go. [21:03] - Privacy is all about not accessing or using data without the owner’s consent, but people don’t realize how much can be known about someone just with combining easily accessible data online. [22:10] - We have built the internet for fast access and use. Customers sign up for a lot of access to sites and apps and don’t think about the use of their data when they do. [24:31] - For companies that are small and don’t have the legal teams to handle a privacy problem, Nishant says the first thing to do is to make sure you really need the information you are asking for from your customers. [25:27] - It is much easier to look at what you’re collecting, the necessity of it all, and how that data could be compromised in the early stages because there’s not a lot of data to dig into. [26:06] - Another tip from Nishant is to lean on tooling to build privacy at scale. He describes what this means with examples. [27:36] - Nishant also explains to make sure that the wall between the legal team and the engineering/privacy team is broken down. Those teams need to work in harmony. [29:10] - Chris and Nishant discuss the pitfalls of deleting data and the importance of consistency. [31:07] - Many companies cannot afford to go through a data breach or legal problem with data privacy. [32:10] - There is an economical factor to consider when collecting too much data or duplicate data that Nishant describes. [34:18] - When signing up for services, sites, or apps, consider why they are asking for the data they say they need. A social security number, for example, is not needed for a grocery delivery. [36:01] - As a result of the GDPR, companies are starting to be required to disclose the information of what consumers’ data is used for. [36:28] - Nishant says that the biggest piece of advice he has for consumers is to always ask questions. At the end of the day, it is your data and you need to know what’s happening with it. [37:56] - Apple specifically has built a really strong privacy standard for other companies to live up to. [40:01] - This time of Covid and the US’s political events have changed the landscape of privacy and data collection and through this crisis, Nishant is confident that great ideas and positive change come through times of unrest. [41:37] - Regulators and lawmakers need the engineering support and need to be a part of our conversations regarding data privacy. [43:24] - Nishant hasn’t met anyone that has thought that privacy is unimportant, but communicating the details and the prioritization is a different challenge. [45:16] - Privacy by Design is Nishant’s book written to educate business owners, engineers, and CEOs that privacy is taken care of at the start instead of as an afterthought as a response to a problem. [47:31] - Regardless of your current understanding of technology, Nishant’s book is a great read to better understand privacy and data collection. Thanks for joining us on Easy Prey. Be sure to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes and leave a nice review. Links and Resources: Podcast Web Page Facebook Page whatismyipaddress.com Easy Prey on Instagram Easy Prey on Twitter Easy Prey on LinkedIn Easy Prey on YouTube Easy Prey on Pinterest Nishant Bhajaria on LinkedIn Privacy by Design by Nishant Bhajaria Nishant Bhajaria on Twitter
“... if they come and ask you, ‘Hey, do you think I can use this stuff?’ I think you got to say, ‘Hey, I'm not a lawyer’.” - Gordon P. FiremarkWhat are my legal rights as a podcast editor? What are my legal responsibilities? How do I protect myself? How much do I need to protect myself? Is it common for things to go wrong? Who can I turn to if I get sued?... The legal ramifications of a disgruntled client or a contract gone wrong are almost enough to make any podcast editor quit before ever starting! But don’t give up your editing dreams too quickly. Hit pause on that panic button and take a deep breath. Now hit play on this podcast with https://firemark.com/ (Gordon P. Firemark), The Podcast Lawyer™ for some practical advice and peace of mind. Gordon Firemark, Lawyer for Theatre, Film, Television and New Media, is more than just a lawyer. He’s also the producer and host of the podcast http://entertainmentlawupdate.com/ (Entertainment Law Update), so he knows firsthand about podcasting. Within his law practice, he helps professionals and artists across the entertainment industries with intellectual property and business/corporate matters. Beyond that, he represents and helps protect clients working within the vast disciplines housed under the terms cyberspace and new media. Sharing his expertise in an easy to comprehend, nuts and bolts fashion, Gordon is also the author of http://podcastlawbook.com/ (The Podcast, Blog and New Media Producer's Legal Survival Guide.) He’s created forms and templates needed by podcasters, editors, and production companies alike. Gordon may be a lawyer and duty-bound to censor what he shares but he’s also a giver and we weren’t shy to be the recipients of his generosity. In this episode, he answers several general questions and even addresses some issues and scenarios you likely didn’t think could come up in your editing business. You won’t want to miss a minute! Highlights:I know I need signed contracts as a podcast editor but how detailed should they be? How can I protect myself against a client submitting work to me that infringes on the rights of others or defames someone or causes a similar bad situation? How much editing is too much? Can I be held liable for over-editing? How can I make sure I’m held legally harmless for the edits requested by a client? What do I do if a client refuses to pay? Who owns the rights to a project a client refused to pay me for? When might I need a trademark or service mark for my business? Do I need to register as an LLC (Limited Liability Company) or am I okay as a sole proprietor? Who do I talk to if I’m thinking an LLC is right for me and my business? What types of documents do I need to prepare to become an LLC? How do I make sure I’m covered for situations where I have clients (or my clients have guests on their show) that are overseas? What about the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation)? Should I be concerned as an editor about things like the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) or the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA)? What about sound effects and music I use in my editing process or my client uses in their show? Can I rely on “Fair Use” to protect me? Errors and Omissions Insurance? What’s that? How do I cover ensuring show guests have given their consent to be recorded and edited? Where can I get Gordon’s podcast release form, his eBook and other resources? Resources:https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/law-topic/data-protection_en (GDPA (General Data Protection Act - for the European Union)) https://oag.ca.gov/privacy/ccpa#:~:text=The%20California%20Consumer%20Privacy%20Act,rights%20for%20California%20consumers%2C%20including%3A&text=The%20right%20to%20delete%20personal,them%20(with%20some%20exceptions)%3B (CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act)) https://www.ftc.gov/enforcement/rules/rulemaking-regulatory-reform-proceedings/childrens-online-privacy-protection-rule (COPPA...
Puntata 75 Bentornato o bentornata su “Ascoltare Podcast”! Quella di oggi è un'altra puntata del “dietro le quinte” del mio show che ho registrato tempo fa con uno dei miei ospiti. Queste puntate sono pubblicate inizialmente solo sul mio canale Telegram https://t.me/ascoltarepodcastbackchannel dove puoi venire ad ascoltarle in anteprima esclusiva, ma se hai pazienza le puoi ascoltare circa 2/4 mesi dopo sul podcast ufficiale, proprio come in questo caso. Ospite di questa puntata è Edoardo Facchini, l'autore di "Privacy4PMI", un podcast dedicato alla privacy e alle varie normative di riferimento, in particolare quella denominata GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Con Edoardo, nel Dietro le quinte di "Ascoltare Podcast", abbiamo parlato dei nostri dati personali, della privacy e della fantomatica legge GDPR, naturalmente
Bryan Cave data privacy attorney Christian Auty returns for Episode 36 to talk about the real world implications of the Schrems II opinion from the European Court of Justice. What is Schrems II? It is shorthand for Case C-311/18 Data Protection Commissioner v. Facebook Ireland Limited and Maximillian Schrems. In it, the Court of Justice reaffirmed that generally, transfers of personal data from the EU to non-EU countries are prohibited unless sufficient measures are taken to protect it. The court followed law found in the European Data Protection Directive and the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Both say that personal data of EU citizens may not be transferred to non-EU countries unless proper safeguards are in place and only if the Non-EU country ensures an adequate level of protection for the personal data transferred. In short, Schrems II invalidated the EU/US Privacy Shield Framework that many companies used to legally transfer data between the EU and US. The EU and US governments created the Privacy Shield so companies could become certified to securely transfer data between the EU and US. The Schrems II court did not believe that the Privacy Shield did enough to protect EU personal data because, among other things, even under the program, EU citizens have no right to challenge government requests for their information under the Foreign Information Surveillance Act. As Christian explains, although Schrems II invalidated Privacy Shield, it did not invalidate Standard Contractual Clauses (SCC) and he suggests that if you do not have SCCs in place and you transfer data from the EU to the United States, you should look into them. Standard Contractual Clauses are model contract clauses officially sanctioned by the European Commission that address how companies must handle and protect personal data of EU citizens. Christian says too that companies can bolster their contracts and SCCs by implementing a law enforcement policy–a specific policy about how a company will handle inquiries from intelligence agencies or law enforcement regarding data.
Panelists Venia Logan | Matt Broberg Sponsor Linode (https://www.linode.com/) Show Notes [00:02:23] Matt and Venia explain what a Vanity Metric is. [00:06:41] Matt wants to know what is the opposite of a Vanity Metric? [00:10:46] Matt and Venia talk about how having a community strategy is so essential to understanding why we are using metrics. [00:12:27] Matt brings up being in the hot seat of being Community Manager and an uncomfortable moment he had. Venia tells us a powerful story she encountered in her background with the LGBTQ. [00:19:35] Matt shares ones of his favorite quotes and then he asks Venia what’s the risk of measuring, especially with vanity metrics, where you provide an incentive for things that we don’t necessarily want to incentivize? [00:20:25] Venia tells us what GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is and she highly recommends a lawyer, Suzanne Dibble, who has extensively covered GDPR. [00:24:20] Matt and Venia talk about places to start if people are looking for advice and what are things that are vanity looking but could end of being valuable. [00:30:37] Venia talks about communities being socio-cultural in nature and therefore they must be measured social scientifically. [0036:31] Matt and Venia give their takeaways from today’s conversation that you can hold onto when it comes to the idea of vanity metrics. Links CHAOSS (https://chaoss.community/) Matt Broberg Twitter (https://twitter.com/mbbroberg?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Venia Logan Twitter (https://twitter.com/samanthavenia) MeasurementMarketing.io-Chris Mercer (https://measurementmarketing.io/) GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation) Suzanne Dibble-GDPR (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation) Credits Produced by Justin Dorfman at CodeFund (https://codefund.io/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Ad Sales by Eric Berry at CodeFund (https://codefund.io/)
In this episode #6, the hosts Naveen Samala & Sudhakar Nagandla have interacted with another guest John J, Information Security Leader based out of Hyderabad, India. Get to know from John on following: - What is the importance of GDPR(General Data Protection Regulation)? - Do we have anything like GDPR applicable for India? - How GDPR is implemented in IT Systems? - How can data regulation and other interdependencies be pursued as a career? - Impact of GDPR on businesses? Is GDPR good for customers? - Data Regulation vs Audit; Roles in Security Space - Data Protection in Organizations Enjoy the episode! YouTube Version of the episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5tt56QEcFFw Do not forget to share your suggestions or feedback at theguidingvoice4u@gmail.com or by messaging at +91 9494 587 187 Follow The Guiding Voice on Social Media: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/theguidingvoice Facebook: http://facebook.com/theguidingvoice4u Twitter: http://twitter.com/guidingvoice Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theguidingvoice4u/ Pinterest: https://in.pinterest.com/theguidingvoice4u/pins/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOTdniz-XB0XRWaBz5-yrqA?view_as=subscriber
This week, we feature two conversations. Cora Borradaile and Michele Gretes, folks involved in the Digital Security Project of the Civil Liberties Defense Center, speak about contact tracing apps and surveillance. Then, Se speaks about Tucson Food Share's grocery distribution program. Contact Tracing Apps First up, we hear Michele Gretes and Cora Borradaile. Michele is the Digital Security Coordinator of the Civil Liberties Defense Center and also does digital security for an environmental non-profit. Cora is a co-founder of the CLDC Digital Security Program and is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Oregon State University with a focus on the security state and the adoption of more-secure apps. They talk about surveillance and the use of apps for tracing folks contact with people infected with covid-19 to slow the pandemic spread. This is a segment of a larger conversation we'll be releasing in the middle of this week as a podcast in which Cora and Michele talk about and compare tools for online organizing that engage encryption and offer alternatives to the google and other “free” products that often surveil their users. We speak about Jitsi, Wire, Zoom, RiseUp, Signal, vpns, The Onion Router, TAILS, KeyBase, Riot.IM, pgp and other mentionables. More at CLDC.org/Digital-Security/ Apple & Google announced this approach toward contact tracing we didn't really cover in detail / by name in this conversation. Here's an article from Wired about it. The White Paper referenced by Cora references from the EU with cryptographers is here. GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) laws, European restrictions on the collection and longtime storage of data on private individuals has been in place since 2016. An article from VOX speaking about ICE using private phone data to seek out and arrest undocumented people in the US. Another talking about current tracking by phone companies of our movements. Tucson Food Share After that, we'll hear from Se of Tucson Food Share, based in Arizona. We talk about their project, how it scaled up from Tucson Food Not Bombs to deliver groceries and hand out burritos publicly, multi-lingual engagement, resisting burnout and finding joy in feeding people. More at TucsonFoodShare.Org . You should get in touch if you're thinking of setting up a food distribution project and have any questions. Announcements New Station: KODX Seattle We'd like to mention that we're now airing on Monday mornings at 2am on KODX in Seattle. You can check out that station's schedule up at kodxseattle.org or hear them in north eastern Seattle on 96.9 on the FM dial. Recent Release: Bomani Shakur and Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin Just a headsup, if you're looking for more content for your ears, we released a small segment of Lorenzo Kom'boa Ervin talking about prisoner organizing in the 1970's and today. This was paired with a longer chat with Lucasville Uprising survivor and death row prisoner Bomani Shakur aka Keith Lamar. For a little over an hour, Bomani talks about his youth, the uprising in 1993, his case and being railroaded. He has an execution date set by the state of Ohio for November 16, 2023. . ... . .. Naughty By Nature - Hip Hop Hooray (instrumental) - Hip Hop Hooray Leslie Fish - Bella Ciao - Smoked Fish and Friends
主播丨丁教 嘉宾丨杜晨 后期丨Luke 随着复工复产被提上日程,各国都在积极开发 “密切接触者” 的追踪应用。硅谷也不例外。 苹果和谷歌在 4 月 28 日提前发布了他们联合开发 API(应用程序编程接口),这是一种接触者追踪技术(Contact Tracing)。 该技术通过 “去中心化” 的设计原则,在最大程度保障用户隐私的情况下来追踪疫情感染者的密切接触人群。但是这样的技术在欧洲和美国是否得到政府支持,各国会针对该项技术有什么改动要求,而使用者又是否愿意接受? 今天我们就来聊聊这一技术的本身。 本期主播 丁教,声动活泼联合创始人 本期嘉宾 杜晨,科技媒体PingWest品玩/硅星人主笔,驻硅谷的记者 提到的问题: 苹果和谷歌联合开发的 API 技术原理 使用这种 API 的政府或机构是否有更改部分设计的权限 英国和法国拒绝使用 “去中心化” 的追踪技术 在疫情严重国家和地区,推进使用这项技术有什么难点 疫情结束后,将如何处理用户数据 名词解释: API: Application Programming Interface,应用程序编程接口。是一些预先定义的函数,或指软件系统不同组成部分衔接的约定。 目的是提供应用程序与开发人员基于某软件或硬件得以访问一组例程的能力,而又无需访问原码,或理解内部工作机制的细节。 苹果官网给出的关于此API的通告: Exposure Notification iOS Framework Documentation(API)Preliminary — Subject to Modification and Extension (https://covid19-static.cdn-apple.com/applications/covid19/current/static/contact-tracing/pdf/ExposureNotification-FrameworkDocumentationv1.2.pdf) Mesh Network:也称为“多跳网络”,Mesh网络也称为“多跳网络”,它是一个动态的可以不断扩展的网络架构,并能有效地在无线设备之间传输。在传统的无线局域网中,用户如果要进行相互通讯的话,那么首先会访问一个固定的接入点(AP),这种访问的方式被称为单跳网络。而在多跳网络中,任何无线设备节点都可以同时作为AP和路由器。这样的好处是:如果最近的节点由于流量大而拥塞的话,那么数据可以重新选择一个小流量路径进行传输。数据包根据网络的情况,从一个节点依次传送到多个节点,最终到达目的地。这样的访问方式就是多跳访问。 Gdpr:《通用数据保护条例》(General Data Protection Regulation (https://gdpr-info.eu/),简称GDPR)为欧洲联盟的条例,前身是欧盟在1995年制定的《计算机数据保护法》。 DP3T:The Decentralised Privacy-Preserving Proximity Tracing (https://github.com/DP-3T/) (DP-3T) 分散式隐私保护邻近跟踪(DP-3T)项目是使用移动设备上的Bluetooth Low Energy(低功耗蓝牙)功能,追踪COVID-19的临近接触的开放协议,可确保个人数据和计算完全保留在个人电话中。 Beacon (https://beacon.schneidercorp.com/):基于C (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_%28programming_language%29)/C++ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C%2B%2B)/Java (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_(programming_language)) 语言开发, 助力用户对服务器运行资源及其系统中关键 Tuxedo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuxedo_(software))/WebLogic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_WebLogic_Server) 应用服务运行资源进行监控和数据分析。具有实时监控、历史数据分析以及多样的即时报警(声音、手机短信、电子邮件等方式)功能。是企业进行 Tuxedo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuxedo_(software))/WebLogic (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oracle_WebLogic_Server)等应用服务器监控的最佳平台和工具。 BGM Counting the Days-Cody High If I Only -Pär Hagström、So Vea 关于我们 网站:guiguzaozhidao.fireside.fm 邮件:ting@sheng.fm 公众号 / 微博 / LinkedIn:声动活泼 声小音微信:shengfm1 (https://files.fireside.fm/file/fireside-uploads/images/4/4931937e-0184-4c61-a658-6b03c254754d/2ELw5say.jpg) Special Guest: 杜晨.
https://www.matrickz.de In this episode, Dr. Hasan Ibne Akram, the CEO of Matrickz and Mario Hoffman talk about the Fines to be paid if you violate the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). This episode is part of a recorded version of the meetup activity on 31 July 2019 ago (autonomous Vehicle Safety & Security Meetup, Munich), Jointly organized by Matrickz GmbH Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/ockl-8hd7Tk #data #dataprotection #moderncars #automotive #selfdriving #softwaredevelopment #matrickz #AUTOSAR #automotiveindustry #matrickztv #autonomous #safety #security
Alan Chapell returns for the second installment of a two-part series about GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation, and the CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act). This week, we cover what you need to know in terms of how both will affect brand and human reputations, the right to be forgotten, and what we all sign up for when visiting a digital site. We also talk about being aware of what we post publically, how/if people can really get their private data off public sites, and what’s next in the Wild West of this digital frontier. Takeaways: [3:49] Alan shares a story about a bank sending him way more data than he needed for a direct mail campaign. This goes to show that our information is not always in the hands of a company that is willing to protect it at all costs and that Facebook isn’t the only business sending out the information of people that they think is protected and private. [9:00] We discuss the Right to Be Forgotten, and the Future of Reputation. When we click yes to agreeing to the “Terms and Conditions,” oftentimes we give up the right to sue, and give up a significant percentage of our rights just by being on the digital platform. [10:20] What goes on Facebook, stays out there in public way after we can delete that one photo. When people post on FB, to a certain degree they are willingly making it now part of the public domain. [13:25] It can be difficult, labor-intensive, and expensive to try to get search engines to remove information. You have to show that it is causing harm, intrusive, inappropriate or problematic in some fashion. [19:10] The same way you can review your credit score and work to dispute false claims or issues, we should have the same right to have our online information reviewed and assessed if it is causing issues. [32:18] Sometimes it’s a data leak, but sometimes it’s companies making bad decisions and deciding to “stalk” their customers. Either way, it’s a sure bet to turn a customer away for life. Quotes: ● “If you’re on Facebook, you are a guinea pig.” ● “People click on these terms and conditions and they have no idea what they are agreeing to.” ● “Be very careful who you share public information with.” ● “Once it leaves your possession, you might as well assume that everyone has it.” Mentioned in This Episode: California Consumer Privacy Act GDPR Alan Chapell Everclear God Forgives, But Google Never Forgets Dave Chappelle Netflix Special Tivory - T-shirt place? Kevin will add!
内容来源:2019年9月20日,在中欧创业营第八期开学模块,中欧创业营课程主任,中欧国际工商学院创业管理实践教授龚焱进行了题为《时代动力与明天思维》的精彩分享。笔记侠作为合作方,经主办方与演讲者审阅,授权发布。今天分享的很多东西都没有定论,比如我说“公司制的黄昏”,可能有很多人并不认同。什么是“公司制的黄昏”?公司制的基础架构产生于工业革命时期,但是在政治制度、经济制度以及底层技术已经发生深刻变化的今天,公司制的底层逻辑几乎没有变化。现在整个时代的经济制度、政治制度和底层技术都发生了深刻革命,但公司制本身没有任何变化,还在原来基础上打补丁。公司制的底层逻辑是什么?两大底层逻辑:合约与激励。首先通过合约把利益相关方黏在一起。合约界定了彼此的责任、权力和义务,如果在博弈中出现冲突,要用什么规则来解决。如果合约解决不了利益相关方之间的博弈,那就让激励机制作为补充和对冲。可是,无论在合约层面,还是在激励机制层面,现代公司制都遇到了瓶颈。为什么会有瓶颈的出现?因为任何创业者和设计者都会有认知隧道——如果把认知比作通道,这个通道是有口径的,我们以为自己认知的是整个世界,但我们看到的只是我们自己对这个世界的演绎和重构。认知的宽度和厚度是由我们的经历决定的。比如,学法学的人可能很难创业,原因很简单,教育过程会塑造你对创业这件事的判断和认知,尤其是对概率的认知。法学教育教会你识别风险和控制风险,所以法学院的人去创业,第一反应是风险在哪里,如何控制风险。而对创业的成功概率有客观认知的人,一般不会选择创业。过于自信是创业者的一大特征,超过70%的创业者认为自己的创业水平超过70%的同行。同时,过去的经历还会导致路径依赖。你过去的经历很大程度上可以解释今天的行为,今天的行为很大程度上可以解释明天的行为,这就是路径依赖。历史的画笔在99.9%的时间内都是在路径依赖的轨道上持续前进,只有当画笔偶尔抖动时,才是非连续创新,但这个抖动无法捕捉,也无从判断。那我们到底可不可以摆脱,甚至突破路径依赖呢?我从两个角度给大家提供一点思路。第一个角度是外向视角:所有的成功离不开一个外向视角,即“时代动力”。第二个角度是内向视角:所有企业的成功也离不开一个内向的动力,那就是创始人本身,你的团队,你的“明天思维”,即站在未来的视角去思考当前面临的竞争格局。在这里面我特别强调两个概念:一个是抽象思维能力,另一个是概念化未来的能力。站在未来视角,能够对今天的竞争格局有概念化和抽象化的能力,在今天是一种非常特殊和稀缺的能力。在技术本身已经商品化的时代,技术不再成为壁垒,真正的壁垒是概念化和抽象化的能力,只要你能够想出来的,从技术角度基本都可以实现。从二战到现在,我们经历了三个不同发展阶段,背后是两次定价权的转移。第一个阶段是上世纪50-70年代,背后的核心逻辑是制造为王。整个产业链里制造商占据了话语权。第二个阶段是上世纪80-90年代,背后的核心逻辑是渠道为王。当供给逐渐增加,从供不应求到供需平衡,话语权不可逆转地从制造商转移到了渠道手里,以沃尔玛为代表的打折性零售商崛起。第三个阶段是2000年之后,新的逻辑是用户为王。原来有句话叫“买的不如卖的精”,反映的是买方和卖方之间天然的信息不对称。但随着互联网的到来,信息鸿沟被最大限度地填平。定价权的天平逐渐从卖方不可逆地转移到买方手中,用户为王的公司站在了舞台中心。基于这样的时代背景,我有四个推论:1.从M2C到C2M的模式转变。当用户拥有越来越多的不可逆的定价权之后,定制化将从边缘走向主流,从小众走向大众。对很多行业而言,从M2C到C2M的模式已经成为正在发生的现实。2.数据的中心化趋势有可能被重写。无论是BAT还是大的数据聚合商,典型的经营模式是把大家的数据做聚合、清洗、打包、变现,这个逻辑的前提是数据中心化。当用户拥有了越来越多的权力之后,用户会要求“我的数据我做主”。欧洲正在推出的GDPR(《通用数据保护条例》General Data Protection Regulation)就是对数据自主权的全新定义。在欧洲做数据生意,从监管角度来看将会非常艰难。从数据中心化到数据自主权的趋势,从脸书的Libra计划中也可以看到端倪——你可以用我的数据,但要付出对应的代价。脸书的世界里,代价就是Libra,是对数据提供交易和补偿的机制,一个token,一个权益。3.三边博弈的边界会模糊。在股东、用户、员工之间的三边博弈中,随着用户话语权的增加,用户将会侵蚀股东和员工的边界,用户将有可能变成虚拟股东或虚拟员工。4.裂变效应。在网络效应和规模效应叠加之后,下一个阶段,能够对冲网络效应的是裂变效应。当用户、股东、员工之间的边界被打破之后,单个用户有可能像裂变反应一样,迸发出巨大的能量,对冲传统意义上的大公司所有的能量。这时候,用户、股东、员工之间的三边博弈,将变成三位一体。本期编辑:镤心 审稿及主播:晴天
内容来源:2019年9月20日,在中欧创业营第八期开学模块,中欧创业营课程主任,中欧国际工商学院创业管理实践教授龚焱进行了题为《时代动力与明天思维》的精彩分享。笔记侠作为合作方,经主办方与演讲者审阅,授权发布。今天分享的很多东西都没有定论,比如我说“公司制的黄昏”,可能有很多人并不认同。什么是“公司制的黄昏”?公司制的基础架构产生于工业革命时期,但是在政治制度、经济制度以及底层技术已经发生深刻变化的今天,公司制的底层逻辑几乎没有变化。现在整个时代的经济制度、政治制度和底层技术都发生了深刻革命,但公司制本身没有任何变化,还在原来基础上打补丁。公司制的底层逻辑是什么?两大底层逻辑:合约与激励。首先通过合约把利益相关方黏在一起。合约界定了彼此的责任、权力和义务,如果在博弈中出现冲突,要用什么规则来解决。如果合约解决不了利益相关方之间的博弈,那就让激励机制作为补充和对冲。可是,无论在合约层面,还是在激励机制层面,现代公司制都遇到了瓶颈。为什么会有瓶颈的出现?因为任何创业者和设计者都会有认知隧道——如果把认知比作通道,这个通道是有口径的,我们以为自己认知的是整个世界,但我们看到的只是我们自己对这个世界的演绎和重构。认知的宽度和厚度是由我们的经历决定的。比如,学法学的人可能很难创业,原因很简单,教育过程会塑造你对创业这件事的判断和认知,尤其是对概率的认知。法学教育教会你识别风险和控制风险,所以法学院的人去创业,第一反应是风险在哪里,如何控制风险。而对创业的成功概率有客观认知的人,一般不会选择创业。过于自信是创业者的一大特征,超过70%的创业者认为自己的创业水平超过70%的同行。同时,过去的经历还会导致路径依赖。你过去的经历很大程度上可以解释今天的行为,今天的行为很大程度上可以解释明天的行为,这就是路径依赖。历史的画笔在99.9%的时间内都是在路径依赖的轨道上持续前进,只有当画笔偶尔抖动时,才是非连续创新,但这个抖动无法捕捉,也无从判断。那我们到底可不可以摆脱,甚至突破路径依赖呢?我从两个角度给大家提供一点思路。第一个角度是外向视角:所有的成功离不开一个外向视角,即“时代动力”。第二个角度是内向视角:所有企业的成功也离不开一个内向的动力,那就是创始人本身,你的团队,你的“明天思维”,即站在未来的视角去思考当前面临的竞争格局。在这里面我特别强调两个概念:一个是抽象思维能力,另一个是概念化未来的能力。站在未来视角,能够对今天的竞争格局有概念化和抽象化的能力,在今天是一种非常特殊和稀缺的能力。在技术本身已经商品化的时代,技术不再成为壁垒,真正的壁垒是概念化和抽象化的能力,只要你能够想出来的,从技术角度基本都可以实现。从二战到现在,我们经历了三个不同发展阶段,背后是两次定价权的转移。第一个阶段是上世纪50-70年代,背后的核心逻辑是制造为王。整个产业链里制造商占据了话语权。第二个阶段是上世纪80-90年代,背后的核心逻辑是渠道为王。当供给逐渐增加,从供不应求到供需平衡,话语权不可逆转地从制造商转移到了渠道手里,以沃尔玛为代表的打折性零售商崛起。第三个阶段是2000年之后,新的逻辑是用户为王。原来有句话叫“买的不如卖的精”,反映的是买方和卖方之间天然的信息不对称。但随着互联网的到来,信息鸿沟被最大限度地填平。定价权的天平逐渐从卖方不可逆地转移到买方手中,用户为王的公司站在了舞台中心。基于这样的时代背景,我有四个推论:1.从M2C到C2M的模式转变。当用户拥有越来越多的不可逆的定价权之后,定制化将从边缘走向主流,从小众走向大众。对很多行业而言,从M2C到C2M的模式已经成为正在发生的现实。2.数据的中心化趋势有可能被重写。无论是BAT还是大的数据聚合商,典型的经营模式是把大家的数据做聚合、清洗、打包、变现,这个逻辑的前提是数据中心化。当用户拥有了越来越多的权力之后,用户会要求“我的数据我做主”。欧洲正在推出的GDPR(《通用数据保护条例》General Data Protection Regulation)就是对数据自主权的全新定义。在欧洲做数据生意,从监管角度来看将会非常艰难。从数据中心化到数据自主权的趋势,从脸书的Libra计划中也可以看到端倪——你可以用我的数据,但要付出对应的代价。脸书的世界里,代价就是Libra,是对数据提供交易和补偿的机制,一个token,一个权益。3.三边博弈的边界会模糊。在股东、用户、员工之间的三边博弈中,随着用户话语权的增加,用户将会侵蚀股东和员工的边界,用户将有可能变成虚拟股东或虚拟员工。4.裂变效应。在网络效应和规模效应叠加之后,下一个阶段,能够对冲网络效应的是裂变效应。当用户、股东、员工之间的边界被打破之后,单个用户有可能像裂变反应一样,迸发出巨大的能量,对冲传统意义上的大公司所有的能量。这时候,用户、股东、员工之间的三边博弈,将变成三位一体。本期编辑:镤心 审稿及主播:晴天
Alan Chapell joins the show this week in the first of a two-part series to talk about the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), and the CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act). We talk about how each will change data privacy regulation, and how it will reshape the way in which data is handled in both advertising and consumer privacy. Alan and I also discuss the basic and extended mechanics in both acts, the commonalities between the two and the core differences between them. Takeaways: [3:54] The GDPR was the product of many years of thought across hundreds of privacy scholars worldwide. They put together a comprehensive consumer privacy law, and it went into effect in May of 2018. [5:12] Part of Alan’s job is to help people and entities manage their presence online, and help them understand how data is accumulated and how we as advertisers and brands are affected. [9:37] In events such as Cambridge Analytica, Facebook tried to deflect and push blame and liability to advertisers. One of the core issues raised by GDPR is how data is used against multiple integrated platforms. [10:46] As a data subject, you have a right to see what is being collected about you. [10:55] The four sections of GDPR: 1. Transparency and modalities. 2. Information and access to personal data. 3. Rectification and erasure. 4. Right to object and automated individual decision making. [22:41] GDBR is an ongoing improvement cycle and will be an evolution for businesses looking to do the right thing. One of the overarching themes of the GDBR is privacy by design. [39:23] CCPA was crafted over two weeks and becomes effective on January 1, 2020. It is not super well defined, but still subject to editing and change. [44:48] Companies should look at the three categories under CCPA, and evaluate their obligations according to which of the three they fall under: 1. Business Entity 2. Service Provider 3. Third-Party [55:02] The EU sees privacy as a fundamental human right, while the U.S. sees data collection as a First Amendment right, focusing on the harms of having data breached. Quotes: ● “You, as a data subject, have a right to tell a company to please stop processing your data.” ● “You do have recourse for companies that are not honoring your rights.” Mentioned in This Episode: California Consumer Privacy Act GDPR Equifax Everclear Alan Chapell
Has the wild, wild west ever really been tamed? We consider this and other burning questions like: Is A/B Testing actually misleading? with our guest - Caylee Migliorini. Caylee has a rich career history in the education management industry. She joins us today to share her experience and expertise in marketing for school enrollment. She is currently the Senior Managing Director of Creative Services and Student Acquisition at BASIS.ed. Caylee offers valuable insights as we think about school marketing and the ways that it is likely to change in the near future. Whether you are a big school with a strong marketing presence or a small school with one toe in the swimming pool, today’s talk will leave you with plenty to think about, and immediate steps to take toward increasing your school’s enrollment. Let’s listen...Quotes:03:45 “That’s a really important place for anyone in enrollment to begin - understanding what the organization’s goals and objectives are.”17:02 “Our job is not to sell something. Our job is to inform parents about the right characteristics - to give them an opportunity to make a decision that’s going to be the best decision for them.”24:20 “We’re getting to a place where there might be systems that are trying to ‘do it all,’ and we might get into the danger zone of trying to over-automate contact. Sometimes a personal touch is more effective than 15 auto-generated emails.”29:50 “Data integrity, security, and the safety of information is something to be very aware of when you’re choosing a system. People’s privacy is very important to them.”31:07 “We are the wild, wild west right now in the US. The European countries have much stricter data privacy and information rules than we do, but we will get tighter.”33:02 “Be true to who you are and what you offer.”Here are some resources mentioned in our discussion:IDEA Public Schools - https://ideapublicschools.org/KIPP Public Schools - https://www.kipp.org/GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation - https://www.forbes.com/sites/quora/2018/02/14/what-is-general-data-protection-regulation/Where to learn more about the guest:Caylee on Linkedin - linkedin.com/in/caylee-migliorini-69349a26BASIS.ed - https://www.basised.com/Where to learn more about Enrollhand:Website: www.enrollhand.comOur webinar: https://webinar-replay.enrollhand.comOur free Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/schoolgrowth/
Episode 31 of the #MVPbuzzChat series. Conversation between Microsoft Regional Director and MVP Christian Buckley (@buckleyplanet), Founder & CEO of CollabTalk LLC, and Nicki Borell (@nickiborell), a principal of Xperts At Work in Germany, and a fellow Microsoft RD and Office Apps & Services MVP. Recorded in August 2018. In this interview, Nicki and I briefly talk about changes to the MVP program, but then focus most of our discussion on the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in the EU, and its impacts on Office 365 and Azure. Specifically, we discuss the differences between Microsoft being GDPR compliant -- and what customers need to consider to be GDPR compliant in using Office 365 and Azure. You can watch the entire interview on the CollabTalk YouTube page at https://youtu.be/O42T5B25NKY And you can find out more about Nicki on the blog at https://www.buckleyplanet.com/2018/08/mvpbuzzchat-nicki-borell.html
Verden er i endring også for annonsører som skal nå oss forbrukere. I fjor ble GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) innført som skal beskytte våre personlig data når vi beveger oss online. Jeg har tatt en prat med Jan Morten Drange som er leder i ANFO som nettopp har vært på en stor global konferanse i Lisboa der Google og Facebooks rolle ble hyppig diskutert. Kravene hardner til også for de største digitale aktørene.
Learn about: · How artificial intelligence (AI) works within the financial services industry · Black box AI & glass box AI, and regulations around AI · The impact of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in the US & Canada · How data and digitalization is changing the banking landscape · The decreasing importance of cash · Predictions on new entrants into the financial industry • About Salim Naran • Sal is the co-founder of Savvyy, a Toronto-based technology company, and co-founder of Borrowell, an innovative marketplace lending platform. He previously held the position of SVP of Information Technology at Paradigm Quest, a business process outsourcing company in the Canadian mortgage industry. He also served as Director of IT and Chief Privacy Officer at Securitas North America, and was responsible for the Canadian information technology department of Canada's third largest security services provider. Learn about Evolve Cyber Security Index ETF (CYBR): https://evolveetfs.com/CYBR
AI-podden med Mats Karlsson, Chef för Handelsbankens Datalab. Mats delar med sig av sina tankar kring AI-utvecklingen i Sverige och i synnerheten inom bankväsendet. Han menar att bankerna i Sverige är så välutvecklade att det blir lägre incitament till ännu mer avancerade lösningar. Det blir typiskt lättare för helt nya banker i exempelvis Kina och Afrika att skapa tjänster som är ännu mer högteknologiska än redan befintliga banker. Vi diskuterar om Kina är en inspiration i utvecklingen. Mats Karlsson berättar att man blir både inspirerad samtidigt som man kan se riskerna med utvecklingen där man kanske får ett samhälle som inte riktigt strävar efter. Det gäller framför frågor som berör personlig integritet, som vi i Europa är mycket mer måna om och där individen skyddas genom lagar som GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation, EU:s dataskyddsförordning). Mats Karlsson berättar också om hur Handelsbanken använder sig av AI för automation av interna processer samt stöd för beslutsfattande för att få högre precision och effektivitet. Där nämner han bland annat att digitalisering har medfört mindre närvaro på Handelsbankens kontor vilket innebär att man måste använda sig av data för att få bättre förståelse för kundens behov. Han menar också att mycket av det rutinmässiga tråkiga arbetet kommer att elimineras bort av AI som ger högre kvalité och samtidigt få möjligheten att fokusera på mer intressanta arbetsuppgifter. Läs mer: https://ai-podden.se/
Learn about how artificial intelligence (AI) and cyber security are intertwined, the association of increased connectivity to cybercrime, the trade-off between convenience and privacy, the impact of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), top predictions, and more. • About Carole Piovesan • Carole Piovesan is Lawyer, Lead in Artificial Intelligence, and Co-Lead of the firm’s National Cybersecurity, Privacy and Data Management group for McCarthy Tetrault. She regularly consults across various sectors on legal and policy issues regarding data and AI. Additionally, she is a frequent speaker and author on topics related to transformative technology, data and artificial intelligence. Learn about Evolve Cyber Security Index ETF (CYBR): https://evolveetfs.com/CYBR
The European Commission issued its second review of how the EU PrivacyShield is working in late December 2018. Over 4,000 U.S. firms have signed up so far for this method of dealing with the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) of the European Union that protects personal data of its residents. The Commission’s report approves U.S. efforts to support the bilateral agreement that supports the Privacy Shield, with one important matter to be address in February 2019. If you have ideas for more interviews or stories, please email info@thedataprivacydetective.com.
The GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) comes into effect on the 25th of May, 2018. For not complying, the fees are up to 20 million Euro. This is why Peter goes through the regulations that effect Blockchain and how you can become compliant (probably). No legal advice, but good old speculation will give you an overview of what GDPR is and what to look out for.
Visit ToughDecisions.net for complete show notes of each podcast episode. In this episode, Dan interviews Richard A. Chapo, Esq. an Internet Lawyer who runs his own law firm: Social Internet Lawyer, Law Office of Richar A. Chapo. Today, Richard drops valuable information on the issue of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), how to comply with […]
Visit ToughDecisions.net for complete show notes of each podcast episode. In this episode, Dan interviews Richard A. Chapo, Esq. an Internet Lawyer who runs his own law firm: Social Internet Lawyer, Law Office of Richar A. Chapo. Today, Richard drops valuable information on the issue of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), how to comply with it, and what it means for us, business owners who use the internet.
For this episode I spoke with Katelin Kennedy, co-founder of Fallone SV, a law firm serving startup founders. We discussed the legal challenges most startup founders don’t prepare themselves for, how the EU’s GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) affects startup companies, and the ways that many traditional law firms are broken.This episode is brought to you by… us. Because of the internet, every business is now also a media company. Your media company needs a professional writer / editor / interviewer / biographer. Hire Connect To Fans to show the world how knowledgeable and experienced you are. Find us online at https://www.connecttofans.net
For this episode I spoke with Katelin Kennedy, co-founder of Fallone SV, a law firm serving startup founders. We discussed the legal challenges most startup founders don’t prepare themselves for, how the EU’s GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) affects startup companies, and the ways that many traditional law firms are broken.This episode is brought to you by… us. Because of the internet, every business is now also a media company. Your media company needs a professional writer / editor / interviewer / biographer. Hire Connect To Fans to show the world how knowledgeable and experienced you are. Find us online at https://www.connecttofans.net
There is no one right way to build your business. There are many factors to consider! The same is true for growing your email list. The options and combinations are endless and what worked 4 or 5 years ago may not be relevant today. Right now, one of the latest and most effective ways to grow your email list is by running giveaways. Giveaways are a newer, modern version of an online contest except for the fact that everyone is a winner! This strategy can result in hundreds, if not thousands of new email subscribers in a short period of time. This week, Karen and Kathleen talk with Maria Saracen, the Queen of Giveaways! Maria helps coaches and business owners DIY their websites and grow their email lists without losing their minds. In this episode we talk about… How to start running giveaways What types of tools are needed to run a giveaway The top benefits of running a giveaway What kind of results Maria has seen while running giveaways The best way to market a giveaway Links to Resources: Mariasaracen.com - http://mariasaracen.com/ Maria's free training on how to run your own giveaway - http://mariasaracen.com/besties Contest Software Upviral - https://upviral.com/ Viralsweep - https://www.viralsweep.com/ GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) resources Lisa Fraley's GDPR webinar replay: https://bit.ly/2HEQQrf The Wellness Business Podcast Facebook Page - https://www.facebook.com/thewellnessbusinesspodcast/ Karen's Facebook Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/emaillistbuildingforcoaches/ Kathleen's Facebook Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/healthcoachpeers/ Kathleen's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kathleenlegrys/ Karen's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/karenpattock/
In May 2018, the European Union implemented GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). This legislation mandates data protection and privacy and impacts citizens globally. Credly's chief of staff and general counsel, Daniel Doktori, explains what this means to Credly users and all internet users in general. Doktori brings it to life!
En este episodio tratamos a fondo GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), para ello tuvimos el gran honor de contar con Luciano Monchiero (Abogado experto en delitos informáticos). Tambien tuvimos la suerte de contar con Jorge Vila (Coordinador Técnico del Grupo de Investigación de Ingeniería Social y actual colaborador de Secure Podcast). Staff presente: Diego Bruno Emiliano Piscitelli
Susan Fahringer, a partner at Perkins Coie (perkinscoie.com), an international law firm specializing in corporate, commercial litigation, intellectual property, and regulatory legal advice, gives an overview of the current and coming legal issues regarding AI. The legal issues surrounding AI (artificial intelligence) are poised to be some of the most critical and pertinent areas of concern facing many companies and persons involved in the rapidly growing technology arena. Fahringer informs that biometrics legislation; algorithmic discrimination, which pertains to employers' use of AI to discriminate in hiring practices; privacy issues; product liability issues; and anti-trust issues will be a few of the many legal areas of concern in the expanding AI space. Specifically, in regard to biometrics, questions arise regarding personal data and what those who collect it are actually allowed to do with it. While biometrics can be useful on many fronts, Fahringer states that there should certainly be some guardrails established regarding its collection and use. Fahringer discusses the problems that employers could face legally if their machine learning algorithms are biased. For example, if an employer creates an algorithm to search for potential candidates to interview and subsequently hire, the algorithm needs to be unbiased in every way such that it does not exclude or discriminate against people based on inherent flaws in the algorithm. Race is an obvious area where bias concerns could arise, and employers should take steps to ensure that their algorithms do no use race as a determinant in any way. But another area that may not be as obvious to employers is their use of zip codes, for an algorithm that discriminates due to a particular zip code, whether purposefully or inadvertently, may also be in violation of anti-discrimination laws. Fahringer discusses the many areas of potential legal impediments and problems that exist within the current GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). She outlines the importance of balance within the areas that concern privacy, balance that allows for expanded innovation but still protects the privacy of the individual. Fahringer expects that it will take five to ten years to refine the various laws that exist currently regarding AI, as the field and the laws that surround it are constantly evolving. Fahringer states that disclosures, privacy and data security, product liability, risk, and employment issues will all be areas of increasing concern for manufacturers, consumers, and private individuals alike.
Den nya dataresolutionen GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) infördes den 25 maj 2018 och innebär att alla företag och organisationer måste följa nya regler kring insamling, hantering och lagring av personuppgifter. Missa inte bonusvideon i inlägget nedan!Vad är en personuppgift?Alla uppgifter som kan spåras tillbaka till en person, som t ex en e-postadress, ett telefonnummer, namn, […] Inlägget # 69 Hemsidan och GDPR dök först upp på Greger Hillman.
Forse avrete notato che qualcosa riguardo alla privacy su internet è cambiato. Questo è perché in Europa è entrato in vigore il GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation): ma cos’è esattamente? E quale impatto ha avuto sugli sviluppatori di videogames? Poi, facciamo un recuperone e vi parliamo dei film e serie tv del momento: Deadpool 2 […]
On this edition of The Predictable Revenue Podcast, hosts Collin Stewart and Aaron Ross welcomes Daniel Barber, Co-Founder and CEO San Francisco-based software compliance firm, DataGrail. Brian is a veteran Bay Area startup executive, consultant, and board member. Daniel has led companies big and small, in verticals as far flung as go-to-market consulting, sales development, and data subscription services. Throughout the pod, Collin, Aaron, and Daniel do a deep dive on the hot-button regulatory issue on everyone's mind these days: GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Highlights include: What is GDPR? What does it mean for people's day to day? (7:14), how GDPR is changing list building (11:09), what is legitimate business interest? (22:44), how to handle social selling to prospects in the EU (31:27).
On this edition of The Predictable Revenue Podcast, hosts Collin Stewart and Aaron Ross welcomes Daniel Barber, Co-Founder and CEO San Francisco-based software compliance firm, DataGrail. Brian is a veteran Bay Area startup executive, consultant, and board member. Daniel has led companies big and small, in verticals as far flung as go-to-market consulting, sales development, and data subscription services. Throughout the pod, Collin, Aaron, and Daniel do a deep dive on the hot-button regulatory issue on everyone's mind these days: GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Highlights include: What is GDPR? What does it mean for people's day to day? (7:14), how GDPR is changing list building (11:09), what is legitimate business interest? (22:44), how to handle social selling to prospects in the EU (31:27).
采访 制作丨徐涛 校对丨秘丛丛 (以下文字只是音频内容的少许补充) 欧盟的GDPR(通用数据保护条例,General Data Protection Regulation)在5月25日生效了。 关于这个法案,我观察到了一个有趣的现象。 在硅谷,从创业公司到巨头们,甚至媒体,都对这个法案反应巨大。它们不但早早就开始进行准备,而且在5月25号这天开始用更新过的“用户隐私条款”来轰炸用户的邮箱。媒体上也诸多关于这条法案后续影响的解读和争论。 但在中国,类似反响就小了很多。 为什么这样一个在欧盟生效的法规,会让美国的企业如临大敌?中国公司是否也会受到影响?今天我们的节目就讨论这一话题。 访谈嘉宾 刘入铭,牧诚律师事务所(MagStone Law)创始合伙人。 在这期节目中你能听到 为什么硅谷公司如临大敌?这一法规对欧盟以外地区的公司影响几何; 作为中国公司,需要做哪些方面; 为什么大公司看起来首当其冲,但从长远看可能会是受益者; 这对未来科技创新有何影响; 相关阅读 比数据泄露更可怕的是,Facebook的商业模式正在瓦解 (上) (https://36kr.com/p/5125114) 国内科技公司是否会遭遇 Facebook 危机(下) (https://36kr.com/p/5125284) The Privacy Lawyer Giving Big Tech an $8.8 Billion Headache丨New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/30/technology/gdpr-privacy-lawyer.html) 马克龙敦促硅谷巨头遵守欧洲法规 (https://cn.wsj.com/articles/CN-TEC-20180525120746)
Author Platform Rocket: Self Publishing, Marketing & Advertising Advice For Authors
During this 37th episode of Author Platform Rocket, Jonny Andrews discussions the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and how regulations effect how entrepreneurs should pivot and shift in their practices. Learn about Truth in Lending and the importance of private policies. Download PDF Podcast Transcription Around 2009-2010 there was a shake up by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) put laws in affect that included, if you are going to endorse an affiliate product then you need to let customers know that is what is happening. GDPR was not really created for small business owners, more for big data companies like Google but everyone has been caught up in it. There are lots of companies out there that sell tons of products and take those customer lists then sell them to third parties—this pre-dates the internet. Running Facebook ads, no matter where you are globally if you do not have…track-and-pixel on the disclosure on your website, that’s going to be kind of a problem for you. There are WordPress plugins that have the ability to sense where your customers are coming from based on geography. There are free privacy policies you can use on your website. Truth in Lending is not new. What should you have on your webpage, regardless of where you are located: 1.) Cookie disclosure. 2.) Privacy policy + what you do with customer data. The Checkbox is not necessary as long as you clearly explain what people are getting from your site. It is the people that are able to shift to accommodate new regulations and incorporate it into their marketing who are going to be around the longest. Download PDF Podcast Transcription 3 Key Points: Running Facebook ads, no matter where you are globally, you need track-and-pixel on the disclosure on your website. If you are going to do advertising, you need to have a privacy policy on your website, there are free ones available. Your website needs: cookie disclosure and privacy policy that includes what you do with customer data. Tweetable Quotes: - “You need to disclose what you are doing with people’s data, and what they are signing up for when they sign up.” – Jonny Andrews. - “If you are running Facebook ads, no matter where you are globally, if you do not have…track-and-pixel on the disclosure on your website, that’s going to be kind of a problem for you.” – Jonny Andrews. Resources Mentioned: Author Platform Rocket – Book marketing service Free Privacy Policy Generator WordPress Plugin Cookie Notice By dFactory Copy/Paste Code For Cookie Consent
What is GDPR and is your business GDPR compliant? Has your inbox been flooded with privacy policy updates, and you’re not sure how the new GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) law applies to you and your business? Whether you’re a new business owner or a seasoned entrepreneur, this is something everyone needs to be aware of if you’re doing business online, no matter where you live. In Chalene’s interview with Autumn Witt, a lawyer and expert on topics of this matter, she breaks down exactly what you need to do to keep your business safe. Here’s The System I Use Every Day to be More Organized & Crazy Productive: www.smartlifepushjournal.com Link to Autumn’s Templates: www.AWBfirm.com Follow Autumn on Facebook: facebook.com/AutumnWittBoyd/ Get episode show notes here: www.chalenejohnson.com/podcast Hey! Send me a tweet & tell me what you think about the show! (Use the Hashtag) #BuildYourTribe so I know you’re a homie! XOXO Chalene Connect with me on your fav social platform. At the moment, mine is SnapChat: ChaleneOfficial http://www.Facebook.com/Chalene http://www.Instagram.com/ChaleneJohnson http://www.Twitter.com/ChaleneJohnson
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), Facebook shadow profile, Paywall, Windows/Mac/Linux හොදම development වලට ? Product review අතටම වැදගත් ද ? Parking මීටර් කොච්චර ප්රයොගිකද ? අලුත් Arduino! මතක ඇතුව share කරන්න
GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation alebo po slovensky - Všeobecné nariadenie o ochrane osobných údajov všetkých občanov Európskej únie. Štyri písmená, ktoré strašia firmy a motajú hlavy užívateľom, nakupujúcim, klientom, skrátka všetkým. Čo vlastne GDPR znamená a prečo o tom hovorí celá Európa? Prečo nám zrazu desiatky firiem vypisujú emaily, že chcú aktualizovať naše osobné údaje a čo s nimi robia? Odkiaľ ich vlastne majú? Prečo ich musia teraz vymazať a znovu o ne žiadať? Prečo za porušenie tohto európskeho nariadenia hrozia pokuty od 20 miliónov až po miliardy eur? Kto a aké má vlastne povinnosti a ako sa celá vec týka nás? Braňo Závodský sa rozprával s advokátkou Zuzanou Motúzovou a IT bezpečnostným expertom Pavlom Luptákom. Videozáznam relácie: https://www.expres.sk/144606/mnohe-firmy-sa-zlakli-zavedenia-gdpr-v-europskej-unii/
This week Steven, Shaun and Tim are talking tech once again. This time they are joined by visually impaired games fan James Kyle who is an RNIB volunteer to talk about accessible gaming and the enjoyment he gets out of it. We also summarise the information surrounding the new EU legislation that has just been brought in called GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). We also read through more of your emails and keep you up to date on the week in tech news. #RNIBConnect #TechTalk
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is very important. In this podcast, we cover GDPR compliance requirements for businesses, with a specific focus on marketing.
Carol is joined by Bloomberg’s New York Bureau Chief Jason Kelly and they speak to Cristina Cabella, Data Protection Officer at IBM, on the start of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in Europe. Matt Larson, Bloomberg Intelligence Litigation Analyst, discusses Apple winning $539 million from Samsung in the struggle over smartphone technology. Karen Ross, CEO at Sharp Decisions, talks about training veterans to work in the tech field. Alec MacGillis, Bloomberg Businessweek Writer and Reporter at Pro Publica, discusses his profile on Adams County, Ohio suffering economic hardship. And we Drive to the Close with Brett Ewing, Chief Market Strategist at First Franklin Financial.
Carol is joined by Bloomberg's New York Bureau Chief Jason Kelly and they speak to Cristina Cabella, Data Protection Officer at IBM, on the start of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in Europe. Matt Larson, Bloomberg Intelligence Litigation Analyst, discusses Apple winning $539 million from Samsung in the struggle over smartphone technology. Karen Ross, CEO at Sharp Decisions, talks about training veterans to work in the tech field. Alec MacGillis, Bloomberg Businessweek Writer and Reporter at Pro Publica, discusses his profile on Adams County, Ohio suffering economic hardship. And we Drive to the Close with Brett Ewing, Chief Market Strategist at First Franklin Financial. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
What Does General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Mean For Websites? So, GDPR, huh? :) I'm thinking that you either fall into one of two camps on this. Either you're familiar with this, or you're not. Regardless of what camp you fall into, and regardless of if you're a small business owner, marketer, web developer or whatever, this will be one of those things that EVERYBODY will ask you what you should be doing about it. Starting now. First of all, GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is a law that goes into effect today in the European Union, but it effects most businesses in the world because there's always a chance that an EU citizen or business could provide you their user data through your website. Having said that, some companies have done a better job than others at scrambling around to prepare for ensuring GDPR compliance on their digital presence. I'm trying to keep this simple. Here's my guide. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/paulhickey/support
Seguro que en las últimas semanas has recibido tropecientos emails de empresas que te piden consentimiento para poder continuar enviándote noticias y promociones, o para poder mantener tu información en sus bases de datos. Detrás de estos cambios está la GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Para conocer mejor qué es la GDPR, el por qué de su existencia y regulaciones anteriores que pretendían controlar el uso de los datos de los usuarios por parte de las empresas, hemos entrevistado a Tomás Serna, abogado de K Fund.
Today on episode 18 of Web Hosting Podcast, I continue the discussion of the wordpress hack dissection. I have been asked, since the last episode, about ways to harden and secure a wordpress install and what I recommend to do about managing updates. Also in this episode, GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), Are you ready ... Read more Harden and secure wordpress, using managewp.com and GDPR.
With mere days left until GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) comes into force, now is the perfect time to revisit our December 2017 podcast on data encryption. Whether you’re working toward GDPR compliance, considering cloud migration or just looking for best practices to get encryption right, take 16 minutes and listen to this podcast with special guest Chase Cunningham, Principal Analyst Serving Security and Risk Professionals at Forrester Research. To learn more, read the white paper, "Guard Your Organization’s Data with Intelligent IBM Encryption" [ibm.co/2AuNXWB].
LET'S TALK GDPR | SORTING OUT GDPR Feeling overwhelmed by GDPR? We get it. Let's talk it out. If you have a business page on Facebook, you might've noticed several notifications all about GDPR on your page over the past few weeks. You probably checked it out and then became a bit confused about what it really is. Then you might've started digging around about it and started to see how much there is to it. 1. WHAT is it? GDPR = General Data Protection Regulation. Designed to increase protection of EU residents' personal data. Also gives EU citizens more control over their data. 2. WHAT is the definition of personal data? Name, email, phone number, ID number, location data, IP address, online identifier, company registration number, date of birth, cookie, tag, pixel, religious info, ethnic info, biometrics data, health data, financial data, kids info. 3. WHY is it? Its core premise is that privacy is a fundamental right. It's an update to an existing regulation from the 90s. So it has to evolve as our technology evolves. I actually lived in the UK before and I can tell you one thing: the Scottish and British alike are quite skeptical, suspectful. They're very careful about their information. Everyone uses chip cards now instead of the “old school” slider cards, but whenever they have to input pin information at a register, ATM, etc, they ALWAYS shield their hands. I actually lived there just before America started adopting the chip cards so living over there with a “slider card” - people thought we were such “in the dark ages!!” I think it's part of European culture to be quite skeptical of what data is being used for. Truthfully, as you might imagine due to their history and how data was used against them in the past, the most careful and skeptical country of all in the EU is Germany. Therefore, they have the strictest rules. So prior to GDPR, every country kind of had their own DPA's (Data Protection Authorities) 4. WHERE is it? It's for the EU but it effects anyone who does business / could potentially collect any kind of personal data from EU citizens. 5. WHO does it effect? Anyone who sells to, targets or could come across personal data from EU citizens. EU = 26 countries. Currently includes the UK. Once Brexit hits, we hear they will have their own version of GDPR. 6. WHAT does it effect? What does it change? This completely changes the way data is handled. Everything needs explicit consent now. We can now only process data we REALLY need! Now you need legal justification for why that PD is being processed. Will force us to focus on the critical data (not the nice-to-haves). Hard for us because we want it all “just in case” – for future segmenting, etc. We will also have to radically re-engineer our processes for data handling. a. Email Marketing: Your email lists b. Social Media: c. Facebook custom audiences: need separate consent form from the individual for their email to be used for promoted social media posts. d. Requests for data access: people can now request that you give them a full report on any data you have on them at any given time. When, how, to what they consented, plus the data you hold. e. CRM Platforms (Customer Relationship Management) 7. WHEN is it? Deadline of May 25. 8. WHY should I care? a. THE NEGATIVE SIDES: The penalties are nothing to laugh at. Fines can go as high as €20M or 4% of global revenue (whichever is higher). So if you end up sending emails without appropriate consent, guess what happens? You're going to get fined. Honda and Flybe got fined £83K for the emails they sent back in March 2017. Could cause you to lose customers. Could cause you to lose trust. Consider the cost of obtaining a customer in the first place. b. THE POSITIVE SIDES: Opportunity for transparency and trust, deepen relationships. Competitive advantage. 9. WHAT should I do? a. Don't be slick. b. Analyze your data collection process: how do you currently obtain consent? “Positive opt-in with CLEAR affirmative action” (no pre-ticked boxes anymore). True opt-ins. c. People also need the ability to withdraw consent for each distinct processing activity (no blanket consent) – e.g. email signup forms that pre-tick everything. d. Can't make people do it before they're able to receive your service / product (unless it's a newsletter). e. No grandfathering: applies to ALL personal data you currently have, not just data obtained after May 25. f. Provide clarity: Give as much detail as possible on what their data will be processed FOR and WHO will be processing it. Clearly communicate to your audience about this. What's happening with their data – when, how? Tell them what you're collecting, that you're going to protect their data and do what you say you're going to do. g. Have a response plan & proactive plan: speed matters. Prepared comms ready to go.
The Tech Smart Boss Podcast - Leveraging Technology to Grow Your Business (On a DIY Budget)
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is going into effect on May 25th, 2018 and it seems like the entire Internet is freaking out about it. If you are a small business that interacts with people that live in countries that belong to the European Union, then it applies to you. And it holds the threat of penalties of 4% of your previous year revenues or $20 million euros (whichever is greater) if you are not in compliance. My take, for the majority of small businesses, it's not something you need to worry about from a penalty perspective. But you should worry about keeping your customer's data protected and GDPR may give you the reason and a good guideline how to go about doing it. In this episode, I got into what exactly GDPR is, how it impacts your business, and what steps you should be taking to comply with it. http://www.techsmartboss.com/76
I det här avsnittet pratar vi om det heta ämnet GDPR – General Data Protection Regulation. Alla företags stora gissel den här våren – ja i alla fall de som vill följa den nya förordningen. Och det tror jag nog att alla vill, det kan bli dryga böter annars. I avsnittet ger vi dig några […] Inlägget #037 GDPR – vad behöver du göra i ditt företag? dök först upp på Entreprenörsliv.
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is a new data privacy regulation that aims to give individuals in the EU protection and control over their personal data. It has major implications for your business and the marketing and social media tools you use, whether you're located in the EU or not. In episode #94 of The Science of Social Media, we're breaking down the new GDPR regulation into understandable steps that you and your business can take to keep your social media strategy running smoothly.
Work Your Wellness Biz: Online Marketing for Health and Fitness Coaches
The GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is a regulation in EU law on data protection and privacy for all individuals within the European Union. So, if you work with people in the EU, have people visit your website from the EU, etc., this applies to you! Terms and Conditions template: https://www.jesscreatives.com/tcs (aff. link) Amy Porterfield's podcast: http://www.amyporterfield.com/2018/04/gdpr/ Facebook group for GDPR: https://www.facebook.com/groups/GDPRforonlineentrepreneurs/
Security, Privacy, Risk Management, Cryptocurrencies, & Fintech
GDPR(General Data Protection Regulation) impacts on service providers seems to be a very popular topic. I have published two shows, one explains What is GDPR? and the other about Privacy By Design principles. The idea behind this series is to bring awareness about GDPR and this show focuses on service providers, as they seem to be very confused when it comes to GDPR compliance. They are getting questions from their customers and are not sure how to respond. Show notes can be found here: https://www.securityprivacyrisk.com/gdpr-impacts-on-service-providers/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2028470514075912/admin_activities/ YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQtYBTppBxS0WLeCBx33gNQ?sub_confirmation=1 Apple Podcast Channel: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/security-privacy-risk-management-cryptocurrencies-fintech/id1341499853 Google Play Podcast: https://partnerdash.google.com/music/podcasts/portal/u/0#p:id=playpodcast/series&a=2354411696828237 TuneIn Radio: https://tunein.com/radio/Security-Privacy-Risk-Management-Cryptocurrencies-p1095473
Before starting to sell your products or services, this is the one thing you need to do in order to succeed in your portable business: provide valuable, consistent free content to your audience. You might already have a blog, a newsletter or other channel and struggle to find and create content to share. Or even if you don’t have a business yet, this episode will help you understand why content is so important. Content gives your potential customers access to your expertise. Content is the gateway to your business. Without free content, it’s like having a clothing brand without a store to try on the clothes. Why create FREE content? What you will learn in this episode: Why you are doing a disservice to you and your audience if you are not creating consistent free content Why your free content is crucial to build and grow your portable business What is the essential recipe to turn your free content into customers “Not sharing your free content is like not letting customers into your store.” Download my FREE (https://pages.convertkit.com/7c319ca2a3/c85ce9ea92) Content Strategy Assessment Questionnaire. This will help you assess your business, your market, your brand and help you find ideas for free content. Even if you don’t have a business (yet!) this will help you get prepared before you start. (https://pages.convertkit.com/7c319ca2a3/c85ce9ea92) Highlights from the episode Different types of free content to grow your portable business (04min:30sec) Allow your brand voice shine through your free content (9min:09sec) Categories of goals for your free content (12min:58sec) Overcome your shyness of sharing your content (16min:45sec) Free content vs. paid content (19min:22sec) Problem vs. Pain points and examples (25min:35sec) Find time to create and develop free content (32min:45sec) Use your free content to convert clients (36min:50sec) “Focus on giving value even before you start to sell” Resources Google Analytics (https://analytics.google.com/) Tools for emailing newsletters: AWeber (https://www.aweber.com/) Create your blog: WordPress (https://wordpress.org/) Take action now! Download the Content Strategy Assessment Questionnaire (https://pages.convertkit.com/7c319ca2a3/c85ce9ea92) Check out the resources mentioned in this episode Share your content ideas in our Tandem Nomads private Facebook group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/tandemnomads) Stay tuned for the next episode (TN96) on May 15, 2018 where I deep dive into the new regulation that is rocking the business world: GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation).
Episode 42 of The Redirect Podcast: Google pushed its first public statement out to Google Analytics users centered around GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation. Even though you don't think you're doing business in the EU, your website has global reach and GDPR is nothing to ignore. While the language is vague from Google, we deliver some insights that should be taken up with your legal counsel to help shape your policies. Plus, what happens when your competitors are targeting your brand in PPC ads? An outline of strategies and approaches for combating competitors, as well tactics that you can deploy on your own to research what others are seeking about your competitors. Sneaky. More changes to the ever volatile featured snippets in Google SERPs; this time, it's the ability to filter queries with "refinement bubbles." This and more on The Redirect Podcast. Show notes at https://blacktruckmedia.com/podcast/redirect-podcast-episode-42/
Für alle Entwickler, die mit personenbezogenen Daten arbeiten ist der 25. Mai 2018 ein spezielles Datum. Eine Richtlinie der EU, welche aktuell in vielen Firmen kurz vor Frist behandelt werden muss, erhält an diesem Tag ohne Wenn und Aber ihre Wirksamkeit: die Datenschutzgrundverordnung, kurz DSGVO oder englisch GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Da dieses Thema […]
In this special edition of the Digital Dive Media Podcast, I speak with Rachel Neufeld, a Morris Manning and Martin Associate of the Technology Transactions Practice/ Data Security Privacy & Breach Group about GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). With an important upcoming compliance deadline of May 25th, marketers and sales teams are learning about how this will affect their organization, even if they are not an EU company. Rachel covers a few key details such as: * What constitutes personal data under GDPR? * Can a company cold call under GDPR? * Can a company market to preexisting databases? * Steps to becoming compliant. If you are in sales/marketing and handle personal data, you’ll definitely want to check this out. ***The video and information presented is for educational and informational purposes and is not intended to constitute legal advice.***
with Lisa Hawke (@ldhawke) and Steven Sinofsky (@stevesi) Given concern around data breaches, the EU Parliament finally passed GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) after four years of preparation and debate; it goes into enforcement on May 25, 2018. Though it originated in Europe, GDPR is a form of long-arm jurisdiction that affects many U.S. companies -- including most software startups, because data collection and user privacy touch so much of what they do. With EU regulators focusing most on transparency, GDPR affects everything from user interface design to engineering to legal contracts and more. That's why it's really about "privacy by design", argues former environmental scientist and lawyer Lisa Hawke, who spent most of her career in regulatory compliance in the oil industry and is now Vice President of Security and Compliance at a16z portfolio company Everlaw (she also serves as Vice Chair for Women in Security and Privacy). And it's also why, observes a16z board partner Steven Sinofsky, everyone -- from founders to product managers to engineers and others -- should think about privacy and data regulations (like GDPR, HIPAA, etc.) as a culture... not just as "compliance". The two break down the basics all about GDPR in this episode of the a16z Podcast -- the why, the what, the how, the who -- including the easy things startups can immediately do, and on their own. In fact, GDPR may give startups an edge over bigger companies and open up opportunities, argue Hawke and Sinofsky; even with fewer resources, startups have more organizational flexibility, if they're willing to put in the work. for links mentioned in this episode (and other resources), please go to: https://a16z.com/2018/04/12/gdpr-why-what-how-for-startups/
Information about what GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is about and what to look out for to comply.
Нашумевшие дебаты Марка и Илона, множество исследований, еще больше художественных произведений... Но что же такое AI? А с точки зрения информационной безопасности? Именно об этом решили поговорить наши ведущие. А что думаете вы? Intro / Outro The Yellow Flying Cog by Flying Species http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Flying_Species/Cogs/4_-_The_Yellow_Flying_Cog Google's AI Built Its Own AI That Outperforms Any Made by Humans https://www.sciencealert.com/google-s-ai-built-it-s-own-ai-that-outperforms-any-made-by-humans On the security, privacy, and safety challenges of AI http://www.ml4aad.org/automl/ Why Zuckerberg and Musk Are Fighting About the Robot Future https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/07/musk-vs-zuck/535077/ Elon Musk says we need to regulate AI before it becomes a danger to humanity https://www.theverge.com/2017/7/17/15980954/elon-musk-ai-regulation-existential-threat Live grilling in Mark's backyard https://www.facebook.com/zuck/videos/10103911836230631/ OpenSOC: An Open Commitment to Security https://blogs.cisco.com/security/opensoc-an-open-commitment-to-security http://opensoc.github.io/ https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Гордиевский,_Олег_Антонович https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Petrov Banned In Germany: Kids' Doll Is Labeled An Espionage Device https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/17/515775874/banned-in-germany-kids-doll-is-labeled-an-espionage-device CCS 2017 http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8055659/ GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) https://www.eugdpr.org/ Вредоносные боты уже в сети - как их обнаруживают? можно ли эффективно детектить Sybil attacks? Как отличать человека от бота? А как мы делаем вердикт, что существо перед нами, это человек? И наоборот, может ли AI определять "плохое" поведение людей https://snap.stanford.edu/www2017tutorial/ Privacy in Pharmacogenetics: An End-to-End Case Study of Personalized Warfarin Dosing https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/usenixsecurity14/sec14-paper-fredrikson-privacy.pdf Model Inversion Attacks that Exploit Confidence Information and Basic Countermeasures https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Model-Inversion-Attacks-that-Exploit-Confidence-In-Fredrikson-Jha/02bc27c39eaaa6b85d336be81b15ca19f112a950 David Wagner keynote https://ccs2017.sigsac.org/keynote.html AI может "to hack back": https://www.rescam.org Blindsight by Peter Watts https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blindsight_(Watts_novel) Далекая Радуга by Братья Стругацкие http://strugacki.ru/book_12.html WarGames (1983) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086567/ Introduction to Artificial Intelligence for Security Professionals https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Artificial-Intelligence-Security-Professionals-ebook/dp/B07654CFFQ http://defense.ballastsecurity.net/static/IntroductionToArtificialIntelligenceForSecurityProfessionals_Cylance.pdf Music - KEYGEN MUSIC ~ One hour mix https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c17k4LfLkaE
Peggy Smedley identifies hurdles and milestones for EU's GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), explaining we still have a ways to go in what compliance really means—and the May deadline is just around the corner. She says uncertainty can be very costly and too many businesses remain unprepared and they will pay big time for it.
Peggy Smedley identifies hurdles and milestones for EU's GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), explaining we still have a ways to go in what compliance really means—and the May deadline is just around the corner. She says uncertainty can be very costly and too many businesses remain unprepared and they will pay big time for it.
Fost Campion Național la șah, la vârsta de 10 ani, Roland Costea este astăzi CEE CyberSecurity Architect Lead la Microsoft. A acceptat invitația noastră de a vorbi despre securitate în IT și training, dar am ajuns în câteva zone neașteptat de interesante: cum poți folosi sportul ca strategie de carieră; cum se diferențiază un trainer; cum seconstruiește o relație bazată pe înceredere cu clienții; de ce securitatea în IT este un subiect atât de fierbinte în 2018; Bonus, vorbim și despre GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation și despre ce se va întâmpla cu companiile care la 1 mai 2018 nu vor fi pregătite pentru implementarea acestei reglementări*. Despre toate astea și mai mult de atât în episodul de azi din Rețeaua. Recomandări de cărți de la Roland COstea: The Patriots, de Sana Krasikov; Origin, de Dan Brown; Sapiens. Scurta istorie a omenirii, de Yuval Noah Harari; Homo Deus, de Yuval Noah Harari; The Chemist, de Stephenie Meyer. Bonus, cartea menționată de Tudor: The First 90 Days, de Michael Watkins. * GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). Reprezintă o nouă legislație, la nivelul Uniunii Europene, care va reglementa mult mai strict folosirea datelor personale a cetățenilor UE, de către orice companie care efectuează operațiuni pe teritoriul Uniunii, adică și în România.
Sharon Anolik, President and Founder of Privacy Panacea, talks about her work advising corporate clients on privacy and data protection issues, the looming chaos surrounding the European Union’s GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) and the role she plays on ‘Silicon Valley.’
Na Česko se “valí” něco, čemu se říká GDPR. Pro ty, co vůbec netuší, o co jde, co to vlastně je? Jak se na něj připravit a jaké změny nám přinese? GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation je nové nařízení EU o ochraně osobních údajů. V život vstoupí 25. května 2018. Přináší řadu novinek, jako například větší důraz na zabezpečení osobních údajů, právo na přenositelnost automaticky vedených údajů či právo “být zapomenut” (tedy nezobrazovat se ve výsledcích vyhledávání atp.). GDPR se týká všech firem a institucí, ale i jednotlivců a online služeb, které zpracovávají data uživatelů. Zejména podnikatelé budou muset již urychleně upravit své obchodní podmínky a další právní dokumenty, aby mohli řádně užívat osobní údaje ve svých databázích. Ty musí také lépe zabezpečit a vzít na vědomí i nové a vyšší sankce. Nařízení je reakcí na stále větší džungli osobních údajů v on-line světě. Záměrem zákonodárců bylo dát evropským občanům větší kontrolu nad tím, co se s jejich daty děje. Proto kromě GDPR Evropská unie připravuje ještě nařízení ePrivacy. To má přestavovat doplnění k GDPR. Obecné nařízení GDPR chrání pouze osobní data. Nařízení ePrivacy v porovnání s tím zaručuje důvěrnost všech elektronických informací bez ohledu na to, zda obsahují osobní údaje. Učinné však bude později než GDPR. Jak bylo uvedeno výše, GDPR zavádí celou řadu nových pravidel (možnost přenesení údajů, úprava profilování atd.) a zároveň se rozvíjí ty stávající. Dodržování všech pravidel bude muset každý správce i zpracovatel osobních údajů prokazatelně doložit po celou dobu zpracovávání. Je proto potřeba upravit stávající dokumenty a jak se hezky říká “nastavit procesy” do budoucna. V Dostupném advokátovi jsme proto připravili speciální balíček za tímto účelem - audit GDPR a nastavení na klíč. Ondřej Preuss www.dostupnyadvokat.cz --- rostecky.cz Veškerá doporučení, informace, data, služby, reklamy nebo jakékoliv jiné sdělení zveřejněné na našich stránkách je pouze nezávazného charakteru a nejedná se o odborné rady nebo doporučení z naší strany. Podrobnosti na odkazu https://mladypodnikatel.cz/upozorneni.
Na Česko se “valí” něco, čemu se říká GDPR. Pro ty, co vůbec netuší, o co jde, co to vlastně je? Jak se na něj připravit a jaké změny nám přinese? GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation je nové nařízení EU o ochraně osobních údajů. V život vstoupí 25. května 2018. Přináší řadu novinek, jako například větší důraz na zabezpečení osobních údajů, právo na přenositelnost automaticky vedených údajů či právo “být zapomenut” (tedy nezobrazovat se ve výsledcích vyhledávání atp.). GDPR se týká všech firem a institucí, ale i jednotlivců a online služeb, které zpracovávají data uživatelů. Zejména podnikatelé budou muset již urychleně upravit své obchodní podmínky a další právní dokumenty, aby mohli řádně užívat osobní údaje ve svých databázích. Ty musí také lépe zabezpečit a vzít na vědomí i nové a vyšší sankce. Nařízení je reakcí na stále větší džungli osobních údajů v on-line světě. Záměrem zákonodárců bylo dát evropským občanům větší kontrolu nad tím, co se s jejich daty děje. Proto kromě GDPR Evropská unie připravuje ještě nařízení ePrivacy. To má přestavovat doplnění k GDPR. Obecné nařízení GDPR chrání pouze osobní data. Nařízení ePrivacy v porovnání s tím zaručuje důvěrnost všech elektronických informací bez ohledu na to, zda obsahují osobní údaje. Učinné však bude později než GDPR. Jak bylo uvedeno výše, GDPR zavádí celou řadu nových pravidel (možnost přenesení údajů, úprava profilování atd.) a zároveň se rozvíjí ty stávající. Dodržování všech pravidel bude muset každý správce i zpracovatel osobních údajů prokazatelně doložit po celou dobu zpracovávání. Je proto potřeba upravit stávající dokumenty a jak se hezky říká “nastavit procesy” do budoucna. V Dostupném advokátovi jsme proto připravili speciální balíček za tímto účelem - audit GDPR a nastavení na klíč. Ondřej Preuss www.dostupnyadvokat.cz --- www.mladypodnikatel.cz
In this week’s podcast, Chris Steffen, Technical Security Director at Cryptzone joins Rob Hirschfeld and myself to cover the latest topics in cloud, edge and data security. Chris is a well-respected cloud security expert with practical experience securing large infrastructures as well as an excellent speaker and influencer on all things security, Key Highlights: • Current State of Cloud Security • Where & What is On-Premises? • Hardware Security and Lack of Industry Use • Coming of GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation from European Union) and Impact on US and Global Industry
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) tuo henkilösuojan nykyaikaan. SääntöSuomessa olemme jo monet tottuneet näihin käytänteisiin.
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) tuo henkilösuojan nykyaikaan. SääntöSuomessa olemme jo monet tottuneet näihin käytänteisiin.
Entro il 25 maggio 2018, tutte le amministrazioni - al pari dei soggetti privati - dovranno adeguarsi al nuovo Regolamento Europeo UE 2016/679 in materia di protezione dei dati personali (meglio noto come “GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation”).Questo episodio contiene una semplice introduzione alle principali novità del Regolamento Privacy, guardate dalla visuale delle pubbliche amministrazioni.
Entro il 25 maggio 2018, tutte le amministrazioni - al pari dei soggetti privati - dovranno adeguarsi al nuovo Regolamento Europeo UE 2016/679 in materia di protezione dei dati personali (meglio noto come “GDPR - General Data Protection Regulation”).Questo episodio contiene una semplice introduzione alle principali novità del Regolamento Privacy, guardate dalla visuale delle pubbliche amministrazioni.
Spiderworking's Blogcentric Podcast - Improve Your Blog With My Weekly Challenges
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is coming and it’s something I know is scaring a lot of small business owners and marketers. I too have been nervous so I put a call out on Facebook and LinkedIn for someone to come on to the podcast and talk us through the basics. Annabel Kaye from KoffeeKlatch […]The post GDPR Is Coming To Get You – What You Need To Know – Blogcentric #101 appeared first on Spiderworking.com -Digital Marketing Strategy For Small Business.
Avsnitt 7 av IoT-podden berör alla som i någon form arbetar med persondata. Den 25 maj 2018 ersätts Personuppgiftslagen (PUL) av EU-direktivet GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). För att slippa dryga böter är det hög tid att planera inför förändringen. Kristoffer Arfvidson från IT-säkerhetsföretaget Basalt och Marielle Eide från affärsjuristbyrån Delphi delar med sig av sina bästa tips.
John Atkinson brings you up to date with local and national business news. In this edition: Information on GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation); Nesta are offering a financial prize for an invention ; UK retailers seem to be lacking 'online confidence' and we learn what has the biggest impact on local communities...
Direct Link:http://traffic.libsyn.com/brakeingsecurity/2017-025-How-GDPR-affects-US-Biz-with-Wendyck-Derbycon2017-CTF-info.mp3 GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is weighing on the minds and pocketbooks of a lot of European companies, but is the US as worried? If you read many of the news articles out there, it ranges from 'meh' to 'OMG, the sky, it is falling". GDPR will cause a lot of new issues in the way business is being done, not just in the realm of security, but in the way data is managed, maintained, catalogued, and shared. This week we invited Ms. Wendy Everette Knox (@wendyck) to come in and discuss some of the issues that might hit companies. We also discuss how GDPR and the exit (or not) of the UK from the #European #Union will affect data holders and citizens of the UK. If your company is preparing for the #GDPR mandate, check out the show notes for a lot of good info. ALSO, If you are looking for a ticket to #derbycon 2017, you need to listen to this show, because it has all the info you need to get started. The info is also in the show notes, including the form you need to post your flag information. #RSS: www.brakeingsecurity.com/rss Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZFjAqFb4A60M1TMa0t1KXw #iTunes Store Link: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/brakeing-down-security-podcast/id799131292?mt=2 #Google Play Store: https://play.google.com/music/m/Ifp5boyverbo4yywxnbydtzljcy?t=Brakeing_Down_Security_podcast Join our #Slack Channel! Sign up at https://brakesec.signup.team #iHeartRadio App: https://www.iheart.com/show/263-Brakeing-Down-Securi/ #SoundCloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/bryan-brake Comments, Questions, Feedback: bds.podcast@gmail.com Support Brakeing Down Security Podcast on #Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/bds_podcast #Twitter: @brakesec @boettcherpwned @bryanbrake @infosystir #Player.FM : https://player.fm/series/brakeing-down-security-podcast #Stitcher Network: http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=80546&refid=stpr #TuneIn Radio App: http://tunein.com/radio/Brakeing-Down-Security-Podcast-p801582/ ---Show Notes:---- The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) (Regulation (EU) 2016/679) is a regulation by which the European Parliament, the Council of the European Union and the European Commission intend to strengthen and unify data protection for all individuals within the European Union (EU). It also addresses the export of personal data outside the EU. The primary objectives of the GDPR are to give control back to citizens and residents over their personal data and to simplify the regulatory environment for international business by unifying the regulation within the EU.[1] Would it be better if companies stored less data, or de-anon it to the point where a breach Massive fines for breaches. Usually some percentage of profits… (up to 4% of annual global turnover or €20 Million (whichever is greater)) “Under the GDPR, the Data Controller will be under a legal obligation to notify the Supervisory Authority without undue delay. The reporting of a data breach is not subject to any de minimis standard and must be reported to the Supervisory Authority within 72 hours of the data breach (Article 33).” Is 72 hours for notification realistic? For massive breaches, 72 hours is just enough time to contain Right to be forgotten (not realistic): “A right to be forgotten was replaced by a more limited right to erasure in the version of the GDPR adopted by the European Parliament in March 2014.[19][20] Article 17 provides that the data subject has the right to request erasure of personal data related to them on any one of a number of grounds including non-compliance with article 6.1 (lawfulness) that includes a case (f) where the legitimate interests of the controller is overridden by the interests or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject which require protection of personal data “ GDPR full text: http://ec.europa.eu/newsroom/document.cfm?doc_id=45631 Good intro: https://www.taylorwessing.com/globaldatahub/article-the-data-protection-principles-under-the-gdpr.html Controversial topics: http://www.eugdpr.org/controversial-topics.html Key Changes: http://www.eugdpr.org/key-changes.html Difficulty of doing GDPR in the cloud https://hackernoon.com/why-gdpr-compliance-is-difficult-in-the-cloud-9755867a3662 US businesses largely ignoring GDPR http://www.informationsecuritybuzz.com/expert-comments/us-businesses-ignoring-gdpr/#infosec Fears of breach cover-up (due to massive fines ‘up to 4% of profits’) http://tech.newstatesman.com/news/gdpr-cover-ups-security From the UK ICO, 12 steps to take now to prepare for GDPR https://ico.org.uk/media/for-organisations/documents/1624219/preparing-for-the-gdpr-12-steps.pdf (has a nice infographic on p. 2) https://www.auditscripts.com/ CTF for derby ticket Level 1- The internet is a big place :) I’ve hidden 3 flags out on it and it’s your job to see how many you can find. I’ll give you a few hints to start. Company Name = Big Bob’s Chemistry Lab There’s something illegal going on, find out what!! Submit flags here https://goo.gl/forms/iUEVHNuSYr34OZA22
GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) är helt nya [...]
Rosemary Smith talks to us about the new EU data protection rules – General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) What should you do about data protection and GDPR now the UK has voted to exit the EU? We asked one of the UK's leading experts in data protection, Rosemary Smith. Rosemary's background Rosemary became involved in the lobby against restrictive data protection in Europe whilst working at the Periodical Publishers Association in the late eighties. She wrote the first guide to the 1984 Act for magazine publishers and served on the Advertising Association Data Protection Committee and the CAP Committee. Rosemary was later active in the British List Brokers Association and wrote guidance for members on privacy issues. She served on the working party which drafted the list and database rules in the CAP code. She served on DMA's Governance Committee for eight years and was Chairman until 2008 overseeing lobbying activity, the Mailing, Telephone and Fax preference Services and the DMA Code of Practice. Rosemary was also a member of the DMA Board for 7 years and was DMA Chairman until October 2008. She is an active member of the FEDMA List Council. She has given presentations covering privacy, data protection and self-regulation to audiences in the UK, Europe, USA and Australia. Rosemary is co-author (with fellow Opt-4 Director, Jenny Moseley) of the book "New Data Protection Liabilities & Risks for Direct Marketers" published in September 2004. Rosemary is also Managing Director of data consultancy RSA Direct. What next for Data Protection, post Brexit? Will GDPR still apply? What advice can Rosemary give? It affects you if you handle any data from which an individual can be identified. So that includes B2B data too! Our existing Data Protection Act was created in '95 and enacted in '98, so the latest changes are all about bringing the law up to date. GDPR – General Data Protection Regulation – it was all going smoothly until the Brexit vote. The plan was for the GDPR to be implemented on 25 May 2018. The ICO, Information Commissioners Officer believe the UK needs to prove adequacy to trade with the EU. So UK data protection standards need to be equivalent to EU legislation. Rosemary suggests we could get a GDPR ‘lite'. The UK was a dove in the EU discussions. As opposed to Germany and Spain who were far more stringent. If you process data on people in the EU, then the EU data protection regulations will apply to you as the legislation has the extra territorial reach. So what are the BIG changes? GDPR has 2 overarching principles Transparency – all about making sure individuals know if you are collecting their data what you'll do with their data, how long you'll hold it. This places an emphasis on making your intentions clear on point of capture – Rosemary suggested that previous data protect statements were true examples of obfuscation by nature, they did not make it clear at all. Accountability – you have to account for what you are and aren't doing with the data. How will you secure it, who has access it, will it be shared? Record keeping stuff. For marketing, the big issue is the definition of consent. Under the current legislation that can be done on implied consent, that is opt out. Consent to send communications. However, the new legislation makes the definition, it needs to be UNAMBIGUOUS? Rosemary says you need to be opting in customers. A shock to the system. The time is right to test statements. Opt-4, Rosemary's company has done a lot of testing. She observes that although accept wisdom is that 70% of consumers will not opt-out, but only 30% of consumers will actively opt-in, by tweaking the wording, getting lots of reassurance into the statement, see our privacy policy, you can always unsubscribe, she can get MUCH higher rates than 30%. Balance of interest – is it in the legitimate interest of the organisation to send a communication?