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My Cryptocast welcomes Dominick Romano founder of Drainpipe and contributor to AI for Health, a global initiative run by several agencies in the United Nations. Join Alex Enser and Dominick Romano for an exploration of differential privacy, user experience of artificial intelligence versus blockchain, publicly traded companies adopting Web3, and much more! --- Drainpipe - https://drainpipe.io/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/dromanocpm LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/domromano/ My Crypto Advisor - https://mycryptoadvisor.com Twitter - https://twitter.com/mycryptoadvisor LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexander-enser/ My Cryptocast - https://youtube.com/@mycryptocast ---- All of the Money: by Cali Stylz, published by Wide Open Entertainment Disclaimer: This material is for informational purposes only and not intended to provide financial, investment, legal, regulatory, or tax advice. Please view our disclosure here - https://mycryptoadvisor.com/terms-of-service/
Om Shownotes ser konstiga ut (exempelvis om alla länkar saknas. Det ska finnas MASSOR med länkar) så finns de på webben här också: https://www.enlitenpoddomit.se Avsnitt 417 spelades in den 23 maj och därför så handlar dagens avsnitt om: INTRO: - Alla har haft en vecka... Björn har haft sommar, sol, träning, grillning, pyssla på tomten, inte varit på kontoret, tittat på film. David har jobbat, snickrat en ramp så man kan cykal upp på altanen, tittat på film, varit och badat. - BONUSLÄNK 1: Air ( https://www.imdb.com/title/tt16419074/ ) - BONUSLÄNK 2: Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie ( https://www.imdb.com/title/tt19853258/ ) - BONUSLÄNK 3: På andra sidan häcken ( https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0327084 / ) ALLMÄNT NYTT - Facebook får miljardböter från EU. GDRP finns det tydligen nått som heter.. https://www.thurrott.com/cloud/283439/meta-receives-1-3-billion-gdpr-fine LYSSNARFRÅGA: Ingen fråga, men en presentation av Dentaku som söker jobb. Har precis gått ut Nackademin på utbildningen IT-infrastruktur. Beskriver bra i kanalen "presentationer", men en teaser är "Kan en hel den Windows server och viss del Intune, lite Linux och lite nätverk. Vill gärna jobba med 365, har under praktiken gjort djupdykning i Microsoft Syntex (Content AI) och gillar licensoptimering". MICROSOFT - Microsoft tar bort kravet för inloggning för att använda Bing Chatbot. https://www.thurrott.com/cloud/283286/microsoft-bing-chatbot-drops-sign-in-requirement - Microsoft köper fusion el. Lovar att köpa om 5 år https://www.warpnews.se/energi/en-fusiondriven-framtid-narmare-an-vi-tror-det-tror-microsoft/ APPLE - Final Cut Pro och Logic Pro till iPad https://www.macrumors.com/2023/05/23/apple-releases-final-cut-pro-logic-pro-for-ipad/ - Vertikal layout av objektiven på iPhone 16 https://www.macrumors.com/2023/05/22/iphone-16-vertical-camera-lenses-rumor/ - WWDC, schema, tider och keynote https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2023/05/apples-worldwide-developers-conference-to-kick-off-june-5-2023/ - Apple ❤️ Broadcom https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2023/05/apple-announces-multibillion-dollar-deal-with-broadcom/ - Lästips: Det är 10 år sedan som det började ryktas om en Apple Car. https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/02/07/2014-to-2021-apple-car-has-already-been-six-years-in-the-making GOOGLE: - Bloggartikel om hur google satsar på säkerhet i europa. https://blog.google/around-the-globe/google-europe/continuing-our-support-for-a-safer-europe/ (jag tyckte speciellt att nyheten om "Google Career Certificate in Cyber security" var intressant och bra! https://grow.google/intl/europe/google-career-certificates/cybersecurity/ ) De har fler: https://grow.google/intl/europe/google-career-certificates/ TIPS: - Ordvitsar på Twitter https://twitter.com/punsandoneliner PRYLLISTA - Björn: RODE kommer med ett litet ljud interface och video fångar kort. https://rode.com/en/interfaces-and-mixers/streamer-series/streamer-x - David: Daggvärmare https://www.amazon.se/-/en/Temperature-Regulator-Universal-Telescope-Eyepiece/dp/B08LGRVF9C/ EGNA LÄNKAR - En Liten Podd Om IT på webben, http://enlitenpoddomit.se/ - En Liten Podd Om IT på Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/EnLitenPoddOmIt/ - En Liten Podd Om IT på Youtube, https://www.youtube.com/enlitenpoddomit - Ge oss gärna en recension - https://podcasts.apple.com/se/podcast/en-liten-podd-om-it/id946204577?mt=2#see-all/reviews - https://www.podchaser.com/podcasts/en-liten-podd-om-it-158069 LÄNKAR TILL VART MAN HITTAR PODDEN FÖR ATT LYSSNA: - Apple Podcaster (iTunes), https://itunes.apple.com/se/podcast/en-liten-podd-om-it/id946204577 - Overcast, https://overcast.fm/itunes946204577/en-liten-podd-om-it - Acast, https://www.acast.com/enlitenpoddomit - Spotify, https://open.spotify.com/show/2e8wX1O4FbD6M2ocJdXBW7?si=HFFErR8YRlKrELsUD--Ujg%20 - Stitcher, https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-nerd-herd/en-liten-podd-om-it - YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/enlitenpoddomit LÄNK TILL DISCORD DÄR MAN HITTAR LIVE STREAM + CHATT - http://discord.enlitenpoddomit.se (Och glöm inte att maila bjorn@enlitenpoddomit.se om du vill ha klistermärken, skicka med en postadress bara. :)
In today's podcast we cover four crucial cyber and technology topics, including: 1. PyPI temporarily halts new projects for a day citing malicious project spike2. Nearly 9 million android phones delivered with preinstalled malware 3. U.K. national gets 13 years for role in criminal enterprise 4. Facebook fined 1.3 Billion Euros for GDRP violation I'd love feedback, feel free to send your comments and feedback to | cyberandtechwithmike@gmail.com
Energy bills have been on the rise in recent years. However, they've increased significantly in 2022 due to the reduction in available power supplies and resources following the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Moreover, the growing demand for energy in the digital-first economy has disrupted global supply, making it difficult for providers to procure what they need without spending more than ever before. However, the ongoing Smart Grid (SG) initiatives in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world have helped consumers manage their energy costs. However, smart meters have been under scrutiny for a peculiar reason – security and privacy. Since these devices collect data, they're vulnerable to Cybersecurity threats. In this post, we'll dive deeper into smart metering and explain the types of data smart meters collect and the security risks they pose. We'll also share how these concerns are addressed by energy suppliers in the market. What is Smart Metering? Smart metering is an innovative solution that enables users to track the usage of specific utilities, such as electricity, gas, etc., and get detailed information related to consumption. With accurate usage patterns and readings, consumers can adjust their consumption behaviors accordingly. Smart meters house a powerful communication network called the Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) which collects and transmits data from residential homes to the grid. What Kind of Data Do Smart Meters Collect? Smart meters collect mainly two types of data. The first type is personal data used to identify customers – MPAN and MPXN numbers. The second type of data collected is called inferred data which shows the consumption information. Modern SMETS2 meters are more advanced and can identify usage patterns associated with home appliances, such as televisions, microwaves, and even EV charging. The purpose of this data is to help reveal lifestyle habits and create a sophisticated energy consumption profile encompassing more data, such as consumers' age, employment status, medical conditions, marital status, and routines. In Europe, the GDRP classifies smart meter data as “special category personal data.” Hence, it requires more protection since it provides various types of information malicious criminals can exploit. Uses and Benefits of Smart Meters The data collected by smart meters offer many use cases and benefits to both consumers and energy suppliers. For instance, they enable suppliers to capture accurate energy consumption readings and provide precise bills. Similarly, it provides more visibility to consumers related to their usage and prompts them to control their consumption and costs with better decision-making. Overall, both parties benefit greatly from accurate data in the form of up-to-date data collection (suppliers) and reduced bills (consumers). Moreover, suppliers can also anticipate blackouts during peak hours or seasons and take proactive counter-measures to prevent downtime and overloading. Privacy and Security Risks Associated with Smart Meters With so many benefits on offer, smart meters rapidly becoming an indispensable aspect of energy management around the world. However, just like any connected device, they pose different privacy and security risks. The AMI serves as a potential access point hackers can use to penetrate the meters and get access to the data flow for different malicious activities. Plus, since this data is transmitted 24/7, there's a huge window supplier and governing bodies have to protect it. Any sort of attack can lead to severe financial and legal repercussions. In Europe, the GDPR empowers consumers by giving them full rights to their energy consumption data. As a result, energy providers have to constantly monitor and secure the confidentiality of consumer data. Moreover, they need to inform consumers about how their data is used and where it is stored. How Energy Suppliers Address Security and Privacy Concerns Associated with Smart Meters 1...
In this podcast Walt Zerbe, Sr. Director of Technology & Standards at CEDIA talks with Jonathan Marshall and Alex Buchan who are founding members of Safeshark about the new Product Security & Telecommunications Infrastructure Bill (PSTI) based around ETSI EN 303 645 soon going into effect in the UK that will affect all connected products and how you do business. Compliance will become mandatory! This is the first of it's kind and like ERP and GDRP, will undoubtly make it way to the entire worls in some fashion at some point in time. https://bills.parliament.uk/bills/3069 https://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_en/303600_303699/303645/02.01.01_60/en_303645v020101p.pdf
We look at Ireland's foray into space, discover when we'll get 350MB broadband on flights and chat about how the rest of the world views GDRP with Liam McKenna from Mazars
Meta adds more Advantage to custom audiences... Google updates Tag Manager... the second-hand holiday buying season ahead... Britain's version of the GDRP is on hold, and brands find BeReal a surprisingly inhospitable place.If you like Today in Digital Marketing, you'll LOVE Stacked Marketer: the free daily newsletter that gives marketers an edge on the competition in just 7 minutes a day. ✨ GO PREMIUM! ✨ ✓ Ad-free episodes ✓ Story links in show notes ✓ Deep-dive weekend editions ✓ Better audio quality ✓ Live event replays ✓ Audio chapters ✓ Earlier release time ✓ Exclusive marketing discounts ✓ and more! Check it out: todayindigital.com/premiumfeed ✉️ Contact Us: Email or Send Voicemail⚾ Pitch Us a Story: Fill in this form
Privacy expert Philip Brudney provides practical tips to achieve GDRP compliance and build a privacy program.
Gab user data leaked Biden administration to keep tech export ban rules Hackers give websites great SEO before installing malware Thanks to our episode sponsor, TrustMAPP First it was GDRP in the EU, then California’s CCPA. Now Virginia is set to pass its own Consumer Data Protection Act. Are you ready? Get ready with TrustMAPP.
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Switzerland's Navori is among the most enduring and respected firms on the software side of the digital signage industry - widely used globally and known for being an early adopter of emerging technologies. I did a podcast session with CEO Jerome Moeri about four years ago, and a new product release coming out of Navori presented a good reason to get back together recently. The lab side of the business has been working, for several years now, on an AI-based computer vision platform designed to do audience measurement for retail and digital out of home. The product is called Aquaji, and it pairs with Navori's well-established CMS software. I asked Moeri about the thinking - given there are numerous commercial and open-source computer vision options already on the market. We get into why, what it does, and how it differs with what else is out there. We also talk about the state of the business and industry on what we all hope is the tail end of COVID. We also hear his expectations that the coming year will see a lot of consolidation of the software ecosystem, through acquisition. Intriguingly, Moeri says Navori will be making a couple of acquisition announcements soon. Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Welcome, Jerome. It's been a while since we've talked, I looked up and saw that we first did a podcast almost four years ago now, which is amazing how time goes by. How has things been for Navori in the past year? I've spoken with many companies and generally speaking, they've done okay through all this mess. Jerome Moeri: Yes, the pandemic was a moment of truth and the travel ban was very difficult for us because we are an international company and our business is based on traveling. So it's been difficult. So we had to refocus on the research and development to end this pandemic with many innovations. Yeah, I was curious about that. You've had to adapt to selling only online when so much of your work, with your with the guys I know over here in North America, is relationship-based and Jeffrey and Jordan are on planes a lot visiting clients, and now they've had to do everything online. Have you gotten good at that? Jerome Moeri: It's been difficult but surprisingly our revenue continued to grow last year in 2020 and North America was not affected at all by the pandemic. It's quite surprising, but this is what happened and the Middle East and Asia also kept the same level of revenues. In Europe, it's a bit different. We had a slight drop because, in Europe, we were traditionally working on bigger projects, big deployments in retail, and most of the deployments were put on hold. It was a bit more difficult in Europe but North America and the Middle East and Asia are good. So we did not have any impact. We've been able to do everything remotely using Teams and I guess it has not been too difficult for us because our company is 20 years old so we have a base of customers and all the recurring orders. But I had a thought of the young entrepreneurs, that puts a lot of effort into creating a company and for them, it's been very difficult because they did not have a strong base of customers to face the pandemic. Yeah. I would imagine a lot of your customers are kind of enterprise-level and as I've heard from some other companies, they just carried on knowing that this thing would end and they had the resources and they already had a plan in place. Jerome Moeri: Yeah. We also had to open an online store and start selling online for the entry-level products and we have set up we had to set up full logistics, to take into account this pandemic I've heard that from other companies where they've had to kind of branch into things they wouldn't normally do or don't really want to do, but you have to adjust. Jerome Moeri: Yeah. We had to do it in such a way that we can still continue and not change our business models, and remain consistent working with partners. The development was a bit sophisticated, but we've been able to to to complete this development. Has customer needs changed over the past year, are they asking for different kinds of things? Jerome Moeri: Yeah when the pandemic last year came up, we were in the middle of research and development projects based on computer vision. So we had to stop everything and release a product that is a computer vision system that is integrated into our digital signage and it's managing how many people can enter and how long they would wait if they have to wait to get in the store and we've been able to also to detect whether they are wearing a mask or not. And we did that to help our customers, especially retail in Europe because they needed a solution to open their stores while following the regulation from COVID and so we released an add-on called, “Access Control” which was dedicated to this type of use and it did help a lot our customers in Europe. I've seen a lot of reports around access control systems and thermal readers and things that will meet the people coming in and out of a retail environment or another environment and I've been very curious about how much actual take-up there's been of that. I think it's quite interesting, but because I'm cocooned, so to speak where I live and I'm not traveling and seeing this stuff, I've not read a lot of indication that there's been much take-up in retail, but are you seeing it happen? Jerome Moeri: Yes. It's very important in banks, in department stores where you have multiple entries. A human being cannot count and check how many people are in when you have multiple entries, for instance, and only the computer and the software can do that. It has not been deployed so massively, to be frank, but for downtown department stores or banks, or flagships, it's being used intensively and it was just a solution we tried to bring on the market and to help our customers. You've just released a new product that you were referencing earlier with computer vision, it's called Aquaji? Jerome Moeri: Yeah, so access control was a digital signage product. So it was related to our digital signage product so a maximum of users may take profit of it and it's because when the pandemic happened, I assigned 50% of our R&D team on computer vision starting in 2017 and we have made some prototypes and investigations and also market insights because we thought it was a market that was related to the digital signage or to the OOH and at the same time, it was different in the sense that it's pure AI. And we found this potential market interesting. This market would be worth, according to the insights we get, more than $1B within five years, just the software for artificial intelligence in retail. Now the whole idea of audience measurement using computer vision and AI has been around for 15+ years, there's a number of pretty well-established vendors out there doing it, and we've even seen some of the display manufacturers like NEC, in particular, coming up with their own version of it. And there are open source libraries that have computer vision, open-source code, all that sort of thing. So I'm curious, why did you see the need to develop your own when there was a lot of it out there? Jerome Moeri: So first because such companies do not have digital CMS software in digital signage and the connection between both systems is very interesting because the content is on the digital signage end, we thought we had to make these developments and to release a new range of products. The second point is that this is true, that you have a lot of open source code, viable from the web, with some models enabling you to do some computer vision. When we did research and development, we found out that most of these companies have a level of accuracy at about 40% and this technology is consisting, mostly of counting bodies, not detecting people. So if you have someone passing by multiple times when you have employees, it's just the body and the censors are doing a great job in counting bodies but the computer vision is not needed to count bodies or shapes. What we have developed is we created our own engine, just like we did in digital signage and what makes our system special is that we can combine and create multiple models. So we create models and we combine models to reach a degree of accuracy beyond 90%. This is the first differentiator. The second differentiator is that because we can identify people when someone is passing by multiple times, we catch only one person, and because we identify people, we can say how long they waited in line and how long they stayed in the store. And for the OOH industry, we have also developed a technology which is detecting the field of vision of the people passing by and we can determine, whether they had an object within their field of vision. It can be a product for the retail application, or it can be an advertising panel for OOH, for instance. And we can say if they had the object within the field of vision, and if they looked at the object, or if they interacted with the object and for how long. And so these are the main differentiators. And the reason why we've been able to achieve this is that the engine was created by us. We used to collaborate with university researchers, and we also made our own models and we made an assembly of multiple models. So this is why we can reach a degree of accuracy of 90%. Does the platform only work with Navori's CMS? Jerome Moeri: Yes, absolutely. Okay, and how does it run? Is it running off of the same device that's being used for the media playout or do you need a separate device? Jerome Moeri: We need a separate device, like a PC for the moment, but in June we'll be releasing a small device that would deliver digital signage, a media player plus computer vision, including the camera. Okay, so an all-in-one thing. Jerome Moeri: Yes and it will be far cheaper than the PC solution and it will be all in one. The reason why digital signage and computer vision are interesting is that within the digital signage system, for each impression of an ad, we have the ideal audience demographics, how long they stay, what is the opportunity to see, conversions and stuff like this? So it's a plug-and-play solution that doesn't need to play with API and to create complex and sophisticated systems. The second reason is that digital signage can play some content and choose content according to what the camera can see. So we can reverse the model and adjust the content according to the audience. And again, this is plug-and-play. I have always been curious about the idea of audience measurement-triggered content, so a male 40 to 60 walks in front of the screen, serve content that's contextual to that person. It's always been interesting, but I've wondered how often it's used and how much of a demand is there from brands and from retailers to do that because it could get complicated in terms of the scheduling and planning for that, right? Jerome Moeri: No, you just set conditions and within a few clicks, anyone can do it from the UI and it's always good to adjust. With the content triggering, you have two ways. You may adjust the content on the fly, and you may trigger it. I agree that for the triggering, it's a bit special or figuring is more for emergencies, but I just think the content on the fly is something fully automated and it's very easy to do. And do your customers have their heads around that? They understand the possibilities ‘cause I can see them going, “That's interesting, but that sounds awfully complicated, maybe we'll do that later.” Jerome Moeri: I think it might take several years to make people use this type of solution, but the product is available now, so it's still a product for pioneers. And you should also consider programmatic systems. I’d like to connect Aquaji with a programmatic system so we can deliver some very detailed and accurate statistics on the audience so the cost per impression may rise because of the qualification of the audience. And at that level, we can also measure the level of interest of a given content, because we can compare one content to another, to find out which one is more efficient than the other. Yeah, that to me is the kind of the secret sauce of these computer vision platforms that I don't think gets enough attention is the idea that you can take a look at dwell times and attention levels, piece by piece, and adjust the content accordingly instead of just shoveling it out there and hoping people notice. Jerome Moeri: Yes. Precisely. Do you offer some sort of a dashboard that your customers can then use to see what's going on and understand it? Because if it's just log files and it's just a bunch of numbers. Jerome Moeri: Yes, we have beautiful dashboards within the Aquaji user interface and that's not made much for scientists, but it's more for marketing people and advertising people, so it’s for everyone. We tried to simplify as much as possible. But at the same time, we also have an API for data scientists that may retrieve information of cross-analysis with other business intelligence systems. Do you see this product working more in the digital out-of-home sector or do you see retail being the big take up? Jerome Moeri: We've addressed both markets, but I think OOH might have maybe 30% this year and 70% for retail. This is originally a marketing product, enabling people to move better about their customers, the traffic, their activities, and the customer experience and most of the features are marketing oriented. Have you found your company being drawn more and more into the digital OOH side of things, just because of contracts that have come up? Jerome Moeri: Yeah, contracts/opportunities. I think digital out of home is a very interesting market, especially from the backend, because it's quite complex, you have to create rules and you have a lot of algorithms. From our standpoint, the requirements are quite busy because it’s full-screen content, you usually don't have dynamic contextual content on the screen, no automation, and stuff like that. It's a market that is very interesting from the backend. We are clearly a contender on OOH. There is an incumbent company, which we appreciate a lot by the way and we try to make a difference with this integrated computer vision solution and we think it would be successful. We will start the test of Aquaji next week at Istanbul Airport. It's a bigger deployment. They have, I think a thousand displays, it's a combination of LED displays and system on chip displays and they will make some tests with the content automation. So according to the audience, we might adjust the content on the fly. In the past, when companies have looked at using computer vision hardware and software, they have often tended to just do a sample of locations and extrapolate data based on that sample, just because the hardware and the software costs to do it across all of the display is just cost-prohibitive. I'm assuming that's changing and when it comes to things like Istanbul airport, maybe you're not at every screen with a computer vision node, but you can deploy them more broadly. Jerome Moeri: Yeah. We will release our own hardware and we have simplified the process in such a way that this technology becomes scalable and deployable. Because all the analysis is done on and the numbers are important, but they are less important than the comparison over time, especially in marketing, but also in OOH, because you have to find out the trend. If you are a restaurant, you need to make sure that your customer has not waited more than 10 minutes in a waiting line, for instance, you need to limit how long people stay there in the store based on demographic, age, gender, and stuff like this because it reflects the attractiveness of your store, its assortment, layout and things like this. You have to measure how many people are in store and it's also very important for retail and we created a product that is doing these types of measurements and can adjust the signage at the same time and I think the cost of Aquaji won't be so different from digital signage after two years. Today it's 30% more expensive than digital signage, but within two years, I can tell you, it will be exactly the same price. So twice the price of digital signage to be clear. So with scale, that'll come down. Jerome Moeri: Yeah. We'll develop a small device, plug-and-play, and what is also interesting with Aquaji is that we can plug the system into an IP camera. So any camera pre-installed, we can use the video feed to make the analysis. So we don't need a physical camera next to it or something, to make the analysis. We can plug our system into the security cameras because you already have security cameras to feed them data for inbound people, outbound people, queuing and so we can use these cameras, so it would be a facilitator, the deployments. How much pushback do you get from venues when you start talking about using their security cameras? The whole idea of computer vision, particularly in North America, gets people all excited about an invasion of privacy, which usually is completely wrongheaded, but nonetheless, they're excited about it. So how do you work around the privacy issue? Jerome Moeri: The degree of intrusion of Aquaji is far much lower than a traditional CCTV that retail companies have been using for the last 30 years because we don't store biometrics. We don't store data that are related to individuals. We aggregate on the fly information and so it's very close to the sensor. I remember you had a case in Canada, you had the case with Fairview, I think because this company was storing the biometrics on the backend, on the server for analysis. We don't do that. We don't store biometrics at all and we are compliant with GDPR. It depends on the regulation, whether you film inside or outside, but we are fully compliant with GDPR. So privacy is really a concern for us. This is also why we don't process the kids under 18 years old. We don't track the races and we have a fully encrypted process and we don't store anything that is personal, whether biometrics or images or stuff like this. So I don't think this system is so intrusive. This is for Europe and Canada, with the GDRP. We developed the software with about 50 features. The user can adjust the features of the software to be compliant with local regulations because GDPR might change from one Euro country to another. Then you have the United States, except one of two States, there is no regulation, so it means that the customer can store with Aquaji, the biometrics on the central database and share this information with business intelligence and other marketing material. So, It really depends on the country. We can do everything, but in some countries like Canada and Europe, the user has to restrict the software in such a way that it is compliant. So you run a company, between yourself and your R& D people who are usually pretty early on emerging technology trends. You guys were early adopters of system-on-chip, you were early adopters of Android. What are the trends you're seeing out there that you think are going to get attention and traction within the digital signage ecosystem? Jerome Moeri: I think the digital signage industry is pretty much stabilized now, the software, the display, and software targeting the low-hanging fruits so they deliver a commoditized software and they try to approach the market whether directly or indirectly. And then you have professional software like Navori and at Navori, I would say in the United States, for instance, about 40% of the top digital signage operators are using the Navori OEM and the scale is greater than it used to be a five-years back. And the way I see how the industry would evolve is that these digital signage operators would become stronger, they are doing a lot of acquisitions, including internationally, and these big operators would continue to grow and for the proficient digital signage network, they require sophistication, they require the support of multiple display brands and operating systems and they want to do everything. So, for the top part of the market, we would continue to get stronger. We will also do some acquisitions, some acquisitions would be announced very soon and so there will be some kind of consolidation for the bigger digital signage operators and for the rest of the market it will be taken care of by display vendors and probably the software for all the basic use cases. Yeah, you've had Samsung and LG out there for a while now with their own CMS software. and Samsung in particular has really started to aggressively market MagicInfo in a way that they didn't do for a very long time. You see the big display guys doing that more and more? Jerome Moeri: Oh yeah, you can tell how good the software is in its ability to incorporate artificial intelligence in its coming technologies. It's interesting when you're talking about Navori doing acquisitions. I was curious about that because I get a lot of phone calls and emails from venture capital firms and independent investors who are saying, “Hey, we're interested in acquiring companies, who are out there. Can you help us with that?” And it seems like there's a lot of activity around that right now. I don't know whether they're looking for distressed companies or they just see an opportunity to grow. Jerome Moeri: Yeah, from the software standpoint, you have a lot of national companies, a company that is leading or a number two for a given territory like Germany or Italy, Spain, and these companies, they have a problem because their market is not large enough and they have some market share, but it's not enough to finance the research and development. And these types of companies are typically the best company to acquire and these are our target companies. So who are you buying? Jerome Moeri: I can't tell you today that if you are patient enough, I’ll tell you when it will happen. I'll find out when everybody else does, right? Jerome Moeri: Nope. You would find out earlier, two days before. Alright, Jerome. It was great to catch up with you. Jerome Moeri: Thank you very much, Dave. I wish you a great day. Thank you. Take care.
Debbie Reynolds "The Data Diva," talks to Tara Taubman-Bassirian LLM of Data Rainbow, an award-winning GDRP, Data Protection, and IP Consultant. We discuss EU data regulation reform, GDPR enforcement pace, insider threats, consequences of data breaches, cultural differences between American and European Data Privacy, Schrems II, standard contract clauses, the right to be forgotten, data minimization, and wishes for Data Protection in the future.
Debbie Reynolds "The Data Diva," talks to Tara Taubman-Bassirian LLM of Data Rainbow, an award-winning GDRP, Data Protection, and IP Consultant. We discuss EU data regulation reform, GDPR enforcement pace, insider threats, consequences of data breaches, cultural differences between American and European Data Privacy, Schrems II, standard contract clauses, the right to be forgotten, data minimization, and wishes for Data Protection in the future.
Our guest this week is Dr. Joe Lennerz, Associate Chief of Pathology and the Medical Director of the Center for Integrated Diagnostics (CID) at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). He oversees all aspects of the clinical laboratory service that supports personalized medicine at MGH. He was the principal investigator of the first FDA instrument precision study for the first whole slide scanning system. We're talking about Regulatory matters in digital pathology, the various regulatory bodies at play and the alphabet soup of regulation such as CLIA, CAP , FDA, GDRP and so forth. What is the 21 st century cures act and how does it impact digital pathology? And many folks may be surprised to learn about new initiatives such as the Digital Health Center of Excellence at the FDA, designed to spur innovation. We'll learn about the Alliance for Digital Pathology - A regulatory science initiative to harmonize and standardize digital pathology processes to speed up innovation to patients. In the past it's been tempting for many of us to think of regulation as a burden but is this mode of thinking outdated? By proactively forming partnerships with regulatory bodies will we actually be able to spur innovation and advance the state of the Science?
How many times in the modern business world have you had questions around GDPR? It all sounds like a bit of a minefield right? Well in today's episode we bring you... not just clarity... but how you can harness GDRP systems in your business so that your company stays safe, and also can become more profitable. Today's guest is the West Midlands 'Data Queen' herself, Una Brown. Una has been a business owner for 15 years and today specialises in keeping Black Country business owners safe and compliant when it comes to GDPR. Una has become the go to person that people think about when it comes to questions around GDPR and her reputation has grown all across the West Midlands and beyond! In this episode, top UK business coaches Lewis Haydon and Andy Hemming interview Una Brown. They ask questions about what small businesses can do to harness GDPR and procedure policies into the business, thus allowing them to stay compliant and thrive in their marketing. Una also shares with us lessons as a West Midlands entrepreneur, sharing business growth tips that she has found essential to growing business around Wolverhampton, Walsall, Dudley, and Birmingham. If you would like to find out more about Una and her services... visit otherpeoplesdata.co.uk As always, we do not promote adverts in The Black Country Business podcast... we make it all about adding value and taking you on an audio business coaching journey. The price for the value we give is that we do ask you to share with one business owner that you feel we get benefit from this podcast. For more information on business coaching with Lewis Haydon or Andy Hemming, or if you would like to be a guest on the podcast too... visit https://blackcountry.actioncoach.co.uk To your success, Lewis & Andy
In today's podcast we cover four crucial cyber and technology topics, including: 1. ATM vendor warns of new attack in Belgium 2. Emotet is back with global campaign 3. UK drivers push UBER for GDRP compliance, data retention rights 4. DNS caused Internet issues for many 17 July I'd love feedback, feel free to send your comments and feedback to | cyberandtechwithmike@gmail.com
In this episode we are going to discuss the rise, fall, and rise again of Dell Computers. We will also discuss some news of the unexpected repercussions of GDRP, contact tracing in iOS 13.5, a... The post Ep. 5 – The Rise, Fall, and Rise of Dell appeared first on Back From The Future.
*Please forgive the audio. We’re working on smoothing out the remote recordings. Coming at you from the lockdown in Seattle… Part Two of Online Promo. In this chunk, the group talks about self-promotion through guest blogging, author pages, newsletters, entering contest, hosting contests, and using the member benefits of your local writing organizations. Tracey chats about her first author interview and Jess makes the mistake of trying to do Anne’s hosting job. QUOTE: “We cannot become what we want by remaining what we are.” – Max Depree LINKS: - Rafflecopter - Author giveaway tips and considerations (RaffleCopter blog) - Social Media promotion rules (easy-to-read, but first published in 2011 – you will want to confirm recent updates) - GDRP explained - Mailerlite -- Jessica’s current email host CREDITS: This episode of Your Writing Does Not Suck was recorded and edited by Anne M. Belen.
Law of the Future - The Podcast on Law & Technology with Dennis Hillemann
Can the Household exemption be applied on privately motivated but public Blockchain transactions? An exception to the material scope of the GDRP in connection with blockchain technology (CNIL opinion) Exceptions in the GDRP system in connection with the blockchain technology are a controversial law institute in jurisprudence. Controversial is also the application of the exemption from the material scope with respect to the processing of personal data by a natural person in the course of a purely personal or household activity: and thus without any reference to a professional or economic activity. This exception is systematically covered by Article 2 para 2 c) GDRP and the corresponding recital No. 18 for the GDRP. These concern “the processing of personal data by a natural person in the course of a purely personal or household activity: and thus without any reference to a professional or economic activity”. Nevertheless, the classification of the processing as processing in the course of a purely personal or household activity is problematic, since the classification of the actors in the blockchain applications encounters legitimate difficulties. When looking at solutions, one also encounters the well differentiating opinion of the French CNIL. The view of CNIL, according to which the GDRP does not apply, if a blockchain is used only for personal purposes, for example for a Bitcoin transaction, represents a successful solution, particularly since CNIL justified the legitimate differentiation between the actors (Miner, Software Developers and joint controllers for processing). Besides, the CNIL is aware of the practical difficulties in public blockchains and points out that this remains reserved for a deeper consideration.
Really really loved getting down with this Q&A at VM London a few weeks back, jumping into my thoughts around different social platforms, the GDRP compliance, and how technology is shaping the way that we live, work and breathe. Really solid fireside chat and Q&A here, hope you really enjoy
Dr Johnny Ryan vitnet nylig i det Amerikanske senatet angående GDRP og digitalt privatliv. Det er skremmende hvor mye av vårt digitale liv som blir sporet av de store teknologi-gigantene. Hva skjer om våre data kommer på avveie? Ingen er bedre enn Dr Ryan til å forklare dette.
This was a long one boys and girls, and we cover a lot of ground. Following up on Loot boxes all over again, NIS Denies claims of not paying workers, Epic Games sends customer info to the wrong person, Sony CEO says Consoles are a Niche Market. We also Talk about Telltales Walking Dead, and we cover a metal gaming magazine of the past called....VIDEO GAMES" Podcast Site: https://cbcast.walkinshadows.com/ Written Work: https://blog.walkinshadows.com/ Remix Track: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqmbcBpojyQ Topics: 1. Sony CEO: Gaming Consoles Are now a 'Niche Market' ( https://nichegamer.com/2019/05/23/sony-ceo-gaming-consoles-are-now-a-niche-market/ ) 2. Small Update: NIS denies payment troubles ( https://nichegamer.com/2019/05/22/nippon-ichi-software-responds-to-report-on-financial-troubles-employee-pay/ ) 3. Loot Boxes: Nintendo to shut down 2 games in Belgium & US regulation about to be introduced ( https://nichegamer.com/2019/05/23/nintendo-to-shut-down-fire-emblem-heroes-and-animal-crossing-pocket-camp-in-belgium-over-loot-box-fears/ ) 4. Epic Games alledgedly sends GDRP personal info to wrong person ( https://nichegamer.com/2019/05/22/epic-games-allegedly-sent-gdrp-personal-info-to-wrong-person/ )
Qui in questo audio provo a spiegare in 5 minuti le funzioni del DPO ....
Vandaag vertel ik je wat er nu precies fout ging, waardoor de dossiers van duizenden patiënten op straat kwamen te liggen en wat je zelf kunt doen om dit te voorkomen. Heb je vragen en wil je één op één wat zaken doornemen of vrijblijvend advies? Plan dan direct een telefonische afspraak met mij via deze link: https://altijdveiliginbedrijf.nl/gratis-advies-gesprek Voor de Online Training waar ik het over had ga je naar: https://altijdveiliginbedrijf.nl/online-training/ #jeugdzorg #AVG #privacy #datalek #GDRP #utrecht #altijdveiliginbedrijf #groei #itsecrets #marcelmartens #persoonlijkeontwikkeling #systemen #strategie #cloud #business Weet je niet precies hoe je het beste kunt beginnen? Volg deze simpele stappen om goed van start te gaan. Stap #1 - Volg en luister de Podcasts: IT Secrets Blog: http://blog.itsecretsradio.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/nl/podcast/it-secrets/id1439706047?mt=1 Android: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cDovL2l0c2VjcmV0cy5saWJzeW4uY29tL3Jzcw%3D%3D Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6EZHbnLxFT5p2PA1Z3ggvX?si=3wyW0sZzS0OgJLSWK1UAeQ SondCloud: https://soundcloud.com/it-secrets Stap #2 - Vraag een adviesgesprek aan op: https://Altijdveiliginbedrijf.nl Stap #3 - Bestel het pakket: Altijd Veilig in Bedrijf --> https://altijdveiliginbedrijf.nl Stap #4 - Connect en wordt Lid van de Community: IT Secrets Official Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/288095758679827/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/itsecretsradio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mmartensinsta/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXnsEcLuIcssvYlOZLfc6OWsFczmgdLYo Twitter: https://twitter.com/marcel_martens LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/it-secrets/
Last week we had the pleasure of talking to Dr. Markus Kaulartz, lawyer at CMS Germany, discuss with us the very hot topic of Blockchain & GDPR. We will try to answer the question of how does GDPR, drafted in a world in which centralised and identifiable actors control personal data, sit within a decentralised world like blockchain? Markus is the co-author of "The tension between GDPR and the rise of blockchain technologies". Markus works in the IT law department of CMS Germany with a focus on innovative topics such as blockchain, AI, cyber security and all the data protection issues. Previously to becoming a lawyer, Markus used to work as a software developer. What is Blockchain? From a pure legal point of view there are two aspects: Blockchain is a database which is distributed and synchronised, whose data cannot be deleted. This definition however is controversial within some quarters as blockchain isn't considered as a database but it is used to simplify defining it for a non-IT audience. Blockchain enables us to move digital assets. This is very important because a receiver of a digital token for example will always know that the sender of the token doesn't own it anymore. In other words the tokens transfer of ownership emulates the transfer of ownership of real life offline assets. If we look at the transfer of ownership of paper share certificates they presently use a bank as a central intermediary to help identify who is the present owner of a share. In a blockchain world we can theoretically eliminate the need of the bank. What is GDPR? General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a regulation in EU law on data protection and privacy for all individuals within the European Union and the European Economic Area. It was enacted in May 2016 but only applied from May 2018. It replaced the former EU Data Protection Directive with a big difference that it applied directly to the member states of the EU without the need for it to be transformed into national laws. The other big difference of GDPR with the former EU Data Protection Directive is the amount of the fines. Under GDPR the fines are up to 4% of the global turnover of a company. What is key is that GDPR also applies to companies outside of the EU that works with the EU. For example if you're an Indian or American company who offers services to EU citizen you will have to comply with GDPR regulation. Personal Data & Application of GDPR GDPR only applies where personal data is being processed. Personal data is defined as any information relating, directly or indirectly, to a natural living person, whether the data identifies the person or makes him or her identifiable. Article 4 of GDPR defines Personal Data - "as any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person (‘data subject’); an identifiable natural person is one who can be identified, directly or indirectly, in particular by reference to an identifier such as a name, an identification number, location data, an online identifier or to one or more factors specific to the physical, physiological, genetic, mental, economic, cultural or social identity of that natural person." The key implication is that a person, not a company, can be identified or identifiable. Being identifiable means you don't necessarily need to have their name, or address of the person, it suffices to have their unique ID and even their IP address. In a blockchain world the public key is considered as personal data as it is related to an identifiable person. Having any of these identifiable data points means that GDRP applies. If GDPR applies an assessment needs to be carried out to identify which obligations are applicable: Inform data subjects with what to do with the data Maintain records of processing activities Implement technical and organisational measures Review in which country the data is stored (i.e. EU or non EU)
Společně s Milanem Fialou z agentury eVisions.cz pro vás natáčíme videa o expanzi do zahraničí. V minulých dílech jsme probírali, kdy nad expanzí začít přemýšlet a kdy se vyplatí expandovat do Německa. V dnešním díle zase rozebíráme, jaké právní nástrahy na vás v Německu čekají a jak se s nimi popasovat. Milan Fiala má v eVisions.cz na starosti německy mluvící trh a klienty, kteří na něj expandují. Má proto praktické zkušenosti s tamním byznysem a dokáže odpovědět na spoustu otázek všech, co o expanzi do Německa uvažují. Přesto ale Milan není právník, a proto v našem rozhovoru nahlíží na otázky především z marketingového hlediska. Vlastní expanzi a veškeré právní záležitosti konzultujte s vlastním právníkem. Co se v rozhovoru dozvíte? - Jaké je německé právo a na co se musí české firmy připravit? - Co je při expanzi znevýhodňuje před německými firmami a jak to změnit? - Co na německé verzi webu nesmí chybět z právního hlediska? - Co to je Datenschutz a proč jsou na něj Němci tak citliví? - Kdy založit německou společnost GmbH a kdy stačí jen ta česká? - Jak se v Německu řeší GDRP a další právní záležitosti? rostecky.cz www.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.
Společně s Milanem Fialou z agentury eVisions.cz pro vás natáčíme videa o expanzi do zahraničí. V minulých dílech jsme probírali, kdy nad expanzí začít přemýšlet a kdy se vyplatí expandovat do Německa. V dnešním díle zase rozebíráme, jaké právní nástrahy na vás v Německu čekají a jak se s nimi popasovat. Milan Fiala má v eVisions.cz na starosti německy mluvící trh a klienty, kteří na něj expandují. Má proto praktické zkušenosti s tamním byznysem a dokáže odpovědět na spoustu otázek všech, co o expanzi do Německa uvažují. Přesto ale Milan není právník, a proto v našem rozhovoru nahlíží na otázky především z marketingového hlediska. Vlastní expanzi a veškeré právní záležitosti konzultujte s vlastním právníkem. Co se v rozhovoru dozvíte? - Jaké je německé právo a na co se musí české firmy připravit? - Co je při expanzi znevýhodňuje před německými firmami a jak to změnit? - Co na německé verzi webu nesmí chybět z právního hlediska? - Co to je Datenschutz a proč jsou na něj Němci tak citliví? - Kdy založit německou společnost GmbH a kdy stačí jen ta česká? - Jak se v Německu řeší GDRP a další právní záležitosti? www.mladypodnikatel.cz www.rostecky.cz
In Episode 54, Erin K. Banks and Brett Roberts met with Steve Touw, CTO of Immuta and he runs the product roadmap for the company which means he talks to customers a lot and he plans out the vision of the company and what they work on. Immuta, is a data management platform that was built to manage access and control of data and to help manage privacy when building machine learning models. They lean towards enabling compliance and ethical data science operations in organizations. We review the data policy snowflake concept and the pain that comes with it and how the control plane helps. We discuss security vs privacy and differential privacy as well as purpose based restrictions with regard to data management. Of course we can’t talk about data and privacy without discussing GDRP Music from this episode is by Andrew Belle. Please go check him out...you'll thank us!
This is part four in the four-part series of short solo episodes with thought-provoking questions and practical checklists for your influencer marketing foundation. You'll figure out if your marketing foundation is solid enough so that when an influencer introduces you to their audience, you get maximum results in the form of news subscribers and clients. Have pen and paper ready so you can write the answers to the questions! Part 4 - Email Sequence Part four in the series focuses on the email series you will send to new subscribers who have been referred by an influencer. The email copy you select and the frequency of communications with those new subscribers will play a large role in whether they decide to continue their journey with you or not. Part 1 - Avatar Part one in the series is dedicated to your ideal client. Really knowing who you want to serve down to the small details will allow you to connect with the right influencers. Part 2 - Lead Magnet Part two in the series is about having an optimized lead magnet perfectly designed for the audiences of influencers. The goal? That your featured presentations and appearances result in a maximum number of subscribers and clients. Part 3 - Landing Page Part three in the series is to help you create the most effective landing page so that visitors to your site who have been referred by an influencer feel compelled to sign up for your lead magnet and to learn more about you. Resources mentioned: 1. Quick Action Guide for Lead Magnets and Opt-In Pages to Grow Your List Discover tactics, ideas, and ready-to-use templates to grow your list: The 3 design secrets for lead magnets to gain new subscribers and paying customers The 2 key factors to select the best kind of lead magnet–and inspiring ideas Exactly what to include in your opt-in page so that you maximize the number of people who subscribe Ready-to-use opt-in page templates for the 2 main kinds of audiences Ready-to-use opt-in box template to maximize signups on your page Headline hacks to boost the number of people interested in your lead magnet Plus receive regular resources to build authority, grow your list, and boost revenue! 2. Forms for the footer of your landing page by attorney Bobby Klinck Ready to use templates (GDRP compliant) https://www.cloriskylie.com/legalforms 3. Beyond Influencer Marketing (the book) https://www.beyondinfluencermarketing.com/
This is part three in the four-part series of short solo episodes with thought-provoking questions and practical checklists for your influencer marketing foundation. You'll figure out if your marketing foundation is solid enough so that when an influencer introduces you to their audience, you get maximum results in the form of news subscribers and clients. Have pen and paper ready so you can write the answers to the questions! Part 3 - Landing Page Part three in the series is to help you create the most effective landing page so that visitors to your site who have been referred by an influencer feel compelled to sign up for your lead magnet and to learn more about you. Part 1 - Avatar Part one in the series is dedicated to your ideal client. Really knowing who you want to serve down to the small details will allow you to connect with the right influencers. Part 2 - Lead Magnet Part two in the series is about having an optimized lead magnet perfectly designed for the audiences of influencers. The goal? That your featured presentations and appearances result in a maximum number of subscribers and clients. Part 4 - Email Sequence Part four in the series focuses on the email series you will send to new subscribers who have been referred by an influencer. The email copy you select and the frequency of communications with those new subscribers will play a large role in whether they decide to continue their journey with you or not. Resources mentioned: 1. Quick Action Guide for Lead Magnets and Opt-In Pages to Grow Your List Discover tactics, ideas, and ready-to-use templates to grow your list: The 3 design secrets for lead magnets to gain new subscribers and paying customers The 2 key factors to select the best kind of lead magnet–and inspiring ideas Exactly what to include in your opt-in page so that you maximize the number of people who subscribe Ready-to-use opt-in page templates for the 2 main kinds of audiences Ready-to-use opt-in box template to maximize signups on your page Headline hacks to boost the number of people interested in your lead magnet Plus receive regular resources to build authority, grow your list, and boost revenue! 2. Forms for the footer of your landing page by attorney Bobby Klinck Ready to use templates (GDRP compliant) https://www.cloriskylie.com/legalforms 3. Beyond Influencer Marketing (the book) https://www.beyondinfluencermarketing.com/
This is part two in the four-part series of short solo episodes with thought-provoking questions and practical checklists for your influencer marketing foundation. You'll figure out if your marketing foundation is solid enough so that when an influencer introduces you to their audience, you get maximum results in the form of news subscribers and clients. Have pen and paper ready so you can write the answers to the questions! Part 2 - Lead Magnet Part two in the series is about having an optimized lead magnet perfectly designed for the audiences of influencers. The goal? That your featured presentations and appearances result in a maximum number of subscribers and clients. Part 1 - Avatar Part one in the series is dedicated to your ideal client. Really knowing who you want to serve down to the small details will allow you to connect with the right influencers. Part 3 - Landing Page Part three in the series is to help you create the most effective landing page so that visitors to your site who have been referred by an influencer feel compelled to sign up for your lead magnet and to learn more about you. Part 4 - Email Sequence Part four in the series focuses on the email series you will send to new subscribers who have been referred by an influencer. The email copy you select and the frequency of communications with those new subscribers will play a large role in whether they decide to continue their journey with you or not. Resources mentioned: 1. Quick Action Guide for Lead Magnets and Opt-In Pages to Grow Your List Discover tactics, ideas, and ready-to-use templates to grow your list: The 3 design secrets for lead magnets to gain new subscribers and paying customers The 2 key factors to select the best kind of lead magnet–and inspiring ideas Exactly what to include in your opt-in page so that you maximize the number of people who subscribe Ready-to-use opt-in page templates for the 2 main kinds of audiences Ready-to-use opt-in box template to maximize signups on your page Headline hacks to boost the number of people interested in your lead magnet Plus receive regular resources to build authority, grow your list, and boost revenue! 2. Forms for the footer of your landing page by attorney Bobby Klinck Ready to use templates (GDRP compliant) https://www.cloriskylie.com/legalforms 3. Beyond Influencer Marketing (the book) https://www.beyondinfluencermarketing.com/
The avalanche of GDPR updates has passed, but regulations are here to stay. Can you sleep well? Our guest today is Aleth Gueguen, an independent software consultant focusing on privacy regulations. You'll learn about the philosophy behind GDRP, the key terms, and what compliance means for you and your customers. Podcast feed: subscribe to http://simplecast.fm/podcasts/1441/rss in your favorite podcast app, and follow us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Play Music. Show Notes GDPR for SaaS — Aleth's website General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) — a Wikipedia article How To Protect Your Users With The Privacy By Design Framework — an article by Heather Burns at Smashing Magazine 10 examples of best practice UX for obtaining marketing consent — an article by Ben Davis Privacy in mobile apps — an ICO guide Userlist.io — Jane's SaaS product (a typical data processor) The GDPR Package — Aleth's consulting package for SaaS companies Follow Aleth on Twitter: @pl4n3th Today's Sponsor This episode is brought to you by Userlist.io. This new tool helps SaaS founders get a better understanding of each individual user journey, and send users relevant behavior-based email. To learn more, join the waiting list at userlist.io. Interested in sponsoring an episode? Learn more here. Leave a Review Reviews are hugely important because they help new people discover this podcast. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a review on iTunes. Here's how.
This is part 1 in the four-part series of short solo episodes with thought-provoking questions and practical checklists for your influencer marketing foundation. You'll figure out if your marketing foundation is solid enough so that when an influencer introduces you to their audience, you get maximum results in the form of news subscribers and clients. Have pen and paper ready so you can write the answers to the questions! Part 1 - Avatar Part one in the series is dedicated to your ideal client. Really knowing who you want to serve down to the small details will allow you to connect with the right influencers. Part 2 - Lead Magnet Part two in the series is about having an optimized lead magnet perfectly designed for the audiences of influencers. The goal? That your featured presentations and appearances result in a maximum number of subscribers and clients. Part 3 - Landing Page Part three in the series is to help you create the most effective landing page so that visitors to your site who have been referred by an influencer feel compelled to sign up for your lead magnet and to learn more about you. Part 4 - Email Sequence Part four in the series focuses on the email series you will send to new subscribers who have been referred by an influencer. The email copy you select and the frequency of communications with those new subscribers will play a large role in whether they decide to continue their journey with you or not. Resources mentioned: 1. Quick Action Guide for Lead Magnets and Opt-In Pages to Grow Your List Discover tactics, ideas, and ready-to-use templates to grow your list: The 3 design secrets for lead magnets to gain new subscribers and paying customers The 2 key factors to select the best kind of lead magnet–and inspiring ideas Exactly what to include in your opt-in page so that you maximize the number of people who subscribe Ready-to-use opt-in page templates for the 2 main kinds of audiences Ready-to-use opt-in box template to maximize signups on your page Headline hacks to boost the number of people interested in your lead magnet Plus receive regular resources to build authority, grow your list, and boost revenue! 2. Forms for the footer of your landing page by attorney Bobby Klinck Ready to use templates (GDRP compliant) https://www.cloriskylie.com/legalforms 3. Beyond Influencer Marketing (the book) https://www.beyondinfluencermarketing.com/
Really really loved getting down with this Q&A at VM London a few weeks back, jumping into my thoughts around different social platforms, the GDRP compliance, and how technology is shaping the way that we live, work and breathe. Really solid fireside chat and Q&A here, hope you really enjoy
While most practitioners focused on the heavy fines and penalties available under GDPR of up to 4% of total global revenues or other very large fines, there are other remedies that each EU and UK data regulator can levy or put into place that may require considerable corporate cost and effort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
While most practitioners focused on the heavy fines and penalties available under GDPR of up to 4% of total global revenues or other very large fines, there are other remedies that each EU and UK data regulator can levy or put into place that may require considerable corporate cost and effort. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
GDRP goes live and we take a look at the implications for the connected car; consumer groups attack Tesla for "Autopilot" name; Uber gives up on autonomous car testing in Arizona. Please remember: If you like this podcast, share it with you friends and colleagues; if you're listening on iTunes Podcasts, leave 5 stars; you can leave me voicemails here on Achor.fm (I promise to reply!); and you can write me on Twitter @MarcHoag and find me on LinkedIn! Cheers! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/autonomous-cars-with-marc-hoag/message
Borús a reggel, mégis optimista péntek a ma (is). Köszöntünk mindenkit, lapokat szemlézünk, merengünk a tegnapi kereskedés fordulatain. Jó hír a befektetőknek! Tőzsdére megy az MKB. A megismerhető részletekről (nincs még sok) Nyemcsók Jánossal, az MKB Bank általános vezérigazgató-helyettesével beszélgetünk. Adatgazda rovatunkban a mai nappal életbe lépő GDRP a témánk. Kórász Tamás, KPGM tanácsadó partnere adott még pár jó tanácsot, információt a késlekedőknek, lemaradóknak. Debreczeni Csabával, az MKB Bank vezető elemzőjével a török líráról, fotinról, dollárról beszélgettünk.
Dalla mia presentazione in fiera, un breve estratto sul gdpr per avvicinarsi all'approfondimento disponibile su www.privacykit.it
Visit www.redpandas.com.au/ep89 for complete show notes, links and resources. Traditionally marketing automation software hasn't done a great job out of the box to take care of customers once they are in your ecosystem. Service Hub by HubSpot signals probably the biggest change but a marketing automation company to address this. We hear from Dave Sheppard himself, director of Sales @ Hubspot for Australia and NZ on who service hub is for and what it does. Plus GDRP, what does it mean for Google Analytics? What do you need to do to make sure you don't lose your data and key reports after May 25th. www.redpandas.com.au/ep89 for more.
In today's podcast we hear that hacktivist lightning is flashing across the Aegean, hitting Greek and Turkish TV stations. Process Doppelgänging is observed in ransomware circulating in the wild. Unstructured data could expose enterprises to GDPR regulatory risk. So might transitive data sharing. Big US companies are ready to follow GDPR standards in North America as well as Europe. Older Lantech industrial servers appear vulnerable to remote code execution. Vandals hit security cameras in Japan. And teachers, don't necessarily leave those kids alone, but maybe that cultist is actually an infosec enthusiast. Emily Wilson from Terbium Labs on third party data showing up on the dark web. Guest is Chris Dollase from Mimecast on the role of the threat researcher.
On May 25, 2018, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) goes into effect, bringing with it some significant changes to how organizations were protecting personal information under the EU Data Protection Directive. In this episode we discuss this with a couple of GDPR experts who have been deep into the weeds in helping organizations to implement the changes necessary to comply with the GDRP. And this certainly is a hot topic! I did an online news search on Feb 7, and there were 114,000 distinct news articles on this topic, with an unlimited number of opinions, warnings, and sky-is-falling predictions. Join our lively discussion with these two GDPR experts, who are based and work in the EU, to sort out some of the GDPR fictions from the facts, along with giving us some great advice.
Dans ce podcast, avec Christophe Boeraeve, nous pointons des aspects de la réglementation qui touchent les RH dans leur travail au quotidien quand on parle de protection des données.Qu'est-ce qui change pour eux, quels sont les points d'attention, les outils et ressources à leur disposition ? Des pièges à éviter ? Comment distinguer les données qui rentrent dans ce cadre, quelles en sont les nuances ? Vous vous posez certainement parfois encore des questions ! On a tellement parlé de la GDRP que nous sommes noyés sous le flux d'informations.... Pas de panique Christophe est là pour nous aider à y voir plus clair.Christophe fait bien de venir partager son expérience ici car toutes les entreprises ne sont peut-être pas suffisamment informées, préparée, ni même équipées pour faire face à ces exigences et respecter les règles. Pourtant il peut leur en couter cher !Alors que vous soyez un petit indépendant à votre compte, une PME et même une grande entreprise : ce podcast vous sera certainement utile d'autant que Christophe cite des références et les ressources disponibles qui ont été rendues accessibles au public par les organismes responsables. Et si vous êtes déjà bien maître de l'information à bord, voyez ce podcast comme un moyen de partager l'information si vous recevez, vous aussi, des questions sur le sujet. Alors la GDPR : Casse-tête chinois ou logique et bon sens ?Si vous vous penchez sur le CV de Christophe, que nos fidèles auditeurs connaissent déjà; vous comprendrez vite que son intervention est plus que pertinente : c'est l'un des meilleurs experts sur le sujet : profitez ici de son partage en écoutant ce podcast.Le site de Christophe : Law-RightNos podcasts sont disponibles sur un maximum de répertoires Podcast, et ils sont hébergés sur Simplecast, Soundcloud, Mixcloud et Acast. Le flux RSS est généré pour tous les répertoires par : Simplecast. Abonnez-vous c'est gratuit et cela le restera.Sponsor & synergies hrmeetup : "transforma bxl", "The Podcast Factory Org" (ASBL-VZW), "RCF".
If you haven't heard of GDPR, get ready. Like the term "data," you're going to be hearing this buzzword a LOT. I've got several posts on it already and will likely have more to say. In this post and podcast episode I'll share why all this data talk is significant, why we need to think about it to not be smarmy, and tips for GDRP compliance. I'm also running a free workshop this week on Freebies + GDPR you won't want to miss. REGISTER NOW! WHY DATA MATTERS Did anyone else catch all those memes and silly videos about Congress questioning Zuckerberg? Many of us laughed at that, but here's the thing: were you surprised by anything he said? Like maybe how Facebook might be tracking you on a website that's not Facebook even if you don't USE Facebook? Here's reality: Data has long been overlooked and it's about to change. People haven't realized how precious data is and the common user of the internet has very little idea what is being tracked and how. These data conversations are really GOOD because they are forcing transparency. I think this is going to have massive ramifications and this whole data buzz word will be around for a while. It also may have long-reaching impact on your business, if you are doing things like running Facebook ads or having a website or email list. I think that there will be some pushback from the typical users who may not like that your blog is storing their info or sharing with third parties. Oh- you didn't know your website was doing that? Let's look at what it IS doing. WHAT DATA YOU MIGHT BE STORING If you have Google Analytics on your site, the Facebook tracking pixel, or run advertisements with third parties, accept comments on your blog, or have comment forms, you are collecting data. How much depends on what you're using. Even if you don't KNOW it, you are tracking data. If you head into the back end of your blog, you'll find that commenters have email addresses stored on your site. That's data that you've collected and GDPR says you are responsible for it. WHAT. Same with contact and other forms on your site. It goes deeper with Google Analytics, even though that typically is using ip addresses and has lots of anonymity (from my understanding). And if you have the Facebook pixel on your site or are using Google ads or other advertisers, you may be sharing your readers' data with third parties EVEN IF YOU DON'T KNOW IT. So if this sounds creepy to you at all, you'll understand why I said that there is going to be long-term fallout and some people are really going to balk at this. DATA, GDPR, AND BEING SMARMY Y'all know I'm all for not being smarmy. So in one sense, I LOVE that this is being brought to light. As bloggers and people using the internet, we need to KNOW that we are storing data. We should know what is being tracked and we should be up front about that with our readers. It's not smarmy if you don't know and don't tell your readers because you simply didn't know. However, as this data conversation continues, ignorance will not keep you from potential fines or from being responsible for the data you're (unknowingly) collecting. I like that now we are creating some accountability. I don't always like some of the specific ways this is playing out with GDPR, but I think that we are moving in a good direction by making all of this more transparent and honest. It's not going to be the wild west of data anymore. Now you know and knowing is half the battle. The other half is doing something with that knowledge. So let's get into specific tips for GDPR compliance. TIPS FOR GRPR COMPLIANCE Here are a few very actionable and fairly simple items you can do: Get the GDPR COMPLIANCE plugin. This will add a checkbox for consent on your comments and also any forms on your site. Update your privacy policy. I know...BORING. There are templates out there, so you might find a good one, but if you want to be SURE you're covered, I'm an affiliate for the products over at Businessese. They JUST updated their privacy policy to have GDRP compliance. Add a banner or overlay asking consent for cookies. I used a widget called EU Cookie Law Banner that I found in my Wordpress site under appearance/widgets. Likely you will see this banner floating along the bottom. I updated it with custom GDPR language. You can also check out the free option from Cookiebot...but I found it a little more robust than I think (hope) is needed. Find out what your email service provider is doing. If you are not using a trustworthy email service provider, this is the time to switch. Under GDPR, you are the data controller, but a lot of the heavy lifting will fall to your data processor. You are responsible, but they do a lot of the tech stuff. Email them to ask. I know that Convertkit, Mailerlite, and Mailchimp have things in place and have already heard from a sad listener who is losing tons of subscribers because of her email service provider and GDRP. Sign up for my free workshop on GDPR and freebies. I think this is going to be one of the biggest areas of impact, so I'm going to dive DEEP into what this looks like. If you are using freebies, lead magnets, or reader magnets to get people to sign up for your email list, you need to come. (If you don't know what those things are, read my post on freebies.) Sign up for the workshop HERE! Links mentioned in the episode: Data being more precious than oil GDPR FAQs Which Email Service Provider You Should Use Disclosure - You're Doing It Wrong Amazon Disclosure Affiliate Programs and Disclosure GDPR Compliance Plugin Cookiebot Businessese Privacy Policy (this is my affiliate link!) ConvertKit - get 30 days free! (this is my affiliate link- message me so I can give you my bonus freebies when you sign up) I hope you found these tips for GDPR compliance helpful and that you are not too freaked out by the whole data situation and what you are collecting and what is being collected by other people when you go to mom blogs on the internet, for example. This is the world we live in!
Meat and Potatoes shines a light on the people in Silicon Slopes who get things done. Hosted by Silicon Slopes Director of Operations Garrett Clark and random interns we explore how, why, and when they get those things done, and why their work is the meat and potatoes of Utah’s tech community. In episode 6 Kimball Dean Parker and Tomu Johnson from the law firm Parsons Behle & Latimer stop by the studio to talk about the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) which is a European Union regulation that governs how businesses and nonprofits handle personal information from individuals in Europe. There are a lot of details about this regulation that will impact Silicon Slopes companies. Luckily, Kimball and Tomu have come up with some innovative tools that can help. They recently launched Parsons Behle Labs and happily the first product to roll out of the lab is a tool designed to help navigate GDRP. The product is called GDPR IQ and will help companies comply with the GDPR in minutes, for a fraction of the price of a lawyer. A business or nonprofit answers simple questions about how it handles personal information. GDPR IQ takes that information and produces a set of customized compliance documents.
Meat and Potatoes shines a light on the people in Silicon Slopes who get things done. Hosted by Silicon Slopes Director of Operations Garrett Clark and random interns we explore how, why, and when they get those things done, and why their work is the meat and potatoes of Utah's tech community. In episode 6 Kimball Dean Parker and Tomu Johnson from the law firm Parsons Behle & Latimer stop by the studio to talk about the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) which is a European Union regulation that governs how businesses and nonprofits handle personal information from individuals in Europe. There are a lot of details about this regulation that will impact Silicon Slopes companies. Luckily, Kimball and Tomu have come up with some innovative tools that can help. They recently launched Parsons Behle Labs and happily the first product to roll out of the lab is a tool designed to help navigate GDRP. The product is called GDPR IQ and will help companies comply with the GDPR in minutes, for a fraction of the price of a lawyer. A business or nonprofit answers simple questions about how it handles personal information. GDPR IQ takes that information and produces a set of customized compliance documents.
On May 25, 2018, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) goes into effect, bringing with it some significant changes to how organizations were protecting personal information under the EU Data Protection Directive. In this episode we discuss this with a couple of GDPR experts who have been deep into the weeds in helping organizations to implement the changes necessary to comply with the GDRP. And this certainly is a hot topic! I did an online news search on Feb 7, and there were 114,000 distinct news articles on this topic, with an unlimited number of opinions, warnings, and sky-is-falling predictions. Join our lively discussion with these two GDPR experts, who are based and work in the EU, to sort out some of the GDPR fictions from the facts, along with giving us some great advice.
A Standard & Poor's ma megkezdi a felülvizsgálati sorozatot a nagy hitelminősítők közül. Nagy a várakozás a felminősítést illetően, pedig előfordulhat, hogy nem mondanak semmit. Hornyák Józseffel, a Portfolio.hu elemzőjével néztük át az esélyeinket egy jobb osztályzatra. Adatgazda rovatunkban arról beszélgettünk Kórász Tamással, KPGM tanácsadó partnerével, hogy a cégek a GDRP felkészülésük eredményeként a nyűg és adminisztrációs macera mellett komoly megtérüléssel is számolhatnak. Kuti Ákos, az MKB Bank vezető elemzője devizapiaci rovatunkban kitűnően összefoglalta, hogy miért gyengül a dollár, holott erősödhetne is, hiszen van némi izgalom az infláció és ezzel együtt a kamatok várható emelkedése miatt. Az ikerdeficit réme viszont most fenyegetőbbnek tűnik a befektetők számára.
“It's quite good to see GDPR as an evolution, not a revolution.” The EU is rolling out a huge privacy data regulation policy this Spring, the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR. If you do anything with “customer data,” you should probably at least take a look at it. Companies like Facebook and others who use customer data to work with third parties are gonna have GDPR all up in their grills. In this interviews episode, we talk with Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno) who's been writing about GDPR of late (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/) from his perch in the UK. Jon's an excellent analyst and always has incisive takes on enterprise IT related matters, as well as music (sadly, not featured in this episode). You can now buy Software Defined Talk t-shirts (https://fsgprints.myshopify.com/collections/software-defined-talk) and fill out the contact form with your mailing address (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/contact) if you'd like some free stickers! Brandon Whichard (https://twitter.com/bwhichard), Coté (https://twitter.com/cote), guest Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno). Show Putting people on the line for data handling problems. Defining legit use for data: like updating on products bought, recommending other things to buy based on past buying. But, when it comes to holding you're kid's interest and other creepy thing, stuff comes into effect. Can't hoard data now, have to justify why you're doing it at least. So, sort of: if a third party gets ahold of the data, you need to spell out to the end-user what the data is and how it'll be used. They started thinking about GDRP in 2005; it's taken then 12 years for them to come up with this. Jon on GDPR, and more “GDPR, a topic about which I feel strangely sad [about]” Summarize it - ensure data can be encrypted, provide data on-demand, notify of data breaches (but just in unencrypted?), appoint CDO, somehow describe policy to end user (is this a set policy or can organizations differ it?), data must stay in EU (unless protection stuff is done off-shore) How'd this come about? “IT professionals expect that compliance with GDPR will require additional investment: over 80 percent of those surveyed expect GDPR-related spending to be at least $100,000.” (Book of all knowledge (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation)) In use (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/): “Facebook needs to ask people if it can use status posts as input to its advertising engines, whereas Google does not need to know someone is — its AdWords algorithms generate information based on search requests, location and so on, without being personally identifiable.” Meanwhile (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=deb992a367), “we will consent to have our privacy even more eroded than it already is.” What exactly should we care about with data privacy: how does an individual think through what Facebook does, Axcion, Target, the government, foreign governments, etc. - aka, Jon vs. The McNealy Privacy Principal (it's dead, get over it). Generalizing to Jon's five rules of cyber security (https://mailchi.mp/84acf426bb46/bulletin-january-26-2018-whence-cybersecurity-and-trust?e=b3386b4844). Background Covering tech (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=d6b6541917): “It's a conundrum: when to say something out loud, even if it's been said before?” @jonno (https://twitter.com/jonno) Jon's author page on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jon-Collins/e/B0034P4X38) Newsletter (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/home/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=df3ab02947) Podcast (http://bluecube.libsyn.com/) Gigaom Column (https://gigaom.com/author/joncollins/) Credits: header image from warrenrandalcarr (https://pixabay.com/en/school-paper-binder-education-934051/). Special Guest: Jon Collins.
“It’s quite good to see GDPR as an evolution, not a revolution.” The EU is rolling out a huge privacy data regulation policy this Spring, the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR. If you do anything with “customer data,” you should probably at least take a look at it. Companies like Facebook and others who use customer data to work with third parties are gonna have GDPR all up in their grills. In this interviews episode, we talk with Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno) who’s been writing about GDPR of late (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/) from his perch in the UK. Jon’s an excellent analyst and always has incisive takes on enterprise IT related matters, as well as music (sadly, not featured in this episode). You can now buy Software Defined Talk t-shirts (https://fsgprints.myshopify.com/collections/software-defined-talk) and fill out the contact form with your mailing address (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/contact) if you’d like some free stickers! Brandon Whichard (https://twitter.com/bwhichard), Coté (https://twitter.com/cote), guest Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno). Show Putting people on the line for data handling problems. Defining legit use for data: like updating on products bought, recommending other things to buy based on past buying. But, when it comes to holding you’re kid’s interest and other creepy thing, stuff comes into effect. Can’t hoard data now, have to justify why you’re doing it at least. So, sort of: if a third party gets ahold of the data, you need to spell out to the end-user what the data is and how it’ll be used. They started thinking about GDRP in 2005; it’s taken then 12 years for them to come up with this. Jon on GDPR, and more “GDPR, a topic about which I feel strangely sad [about]” Summarize it - ensure data can be encrypted, provide data on-demand, notify of data breaches (but just in unencrypted?), appoint CDO, somehow describe policy to end user (is this a set policy or can organizations differ it?), data must stay in EU (unless protection stuff is done off-shore) How’d this come about? “IT professionals expect that compliance with GDPR will require additional investment: over 80 percent of those surveyed expect GDPR-related spending to be at least $100,000.” (Book of all knowledge (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation)) In use (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/): “Facebook needs to ask people if it can use status posts as input to its advertising engines, whereas Google does not need to know someone is — its AdWords algorithms generate information based on search requests, location and so on, without being personally identifiable.” Meanwhile (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=deb992a367), “we will consent to have our privacy even more eroded than it already is.” What exactly should we care about with data privacy: how does an individual think through what Facebook does, Axcion, Target, the government, foreign governments, etc. - aka, Jon vs. The McNealy Privacy Principal (it’s dead, get over it). Generalizing to Jon’s five rules of cyber security (https://mailchi.mp/84acf426bb46/bulletin-january-26-2018-whence-cybersecurity-and-trust?e=b3386b4844). Background Covering tech (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=d6b6541917): “It’s a conundrum: when to say something out loud, even if it’s been said before?” @jonno (https://twitter.com/jonno) Jon’s author page on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jon-Collins/e/B0034P4X38) Newsletter (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/home/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=df3ab02947) Podcast (http://bluecube.libsyn.com/) Gigaom Column (https://gigaom.com/author/joncollins/) Credits: header image from warrenrandalcarr (https://pixabay.com/en/school-paper-binder-education-934051/). Special Guest: Jon Collins.
“It’s quite good to see GDPR as an evolution, not a revolution.” The EU is rolling out a huge privacy data regulation policy this Spring, the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR. If you do anything with “customer data,” you should probably at least take a look at it. Companies like Facebook and others who use customer data to work with third parties are gonna have GDPR all up in their grills. In this interviews episode, we talk with Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno) who’s been writing about GDPR of late (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/) from his perch in the UK. Jon’s an excellent analyst and always has incisive takes on enterprise IT related matters, as well as music (sadly, not featured in this episode). You can now buy Software Defined Talk t-shirts (https://fsgprints.myshopify.com/collections/software-defined-talk) and fill out the contact form with your mailing address (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/contact) if you’d like some free stickers! Brandon Whichard (https://twitter.com/bwhichard), Coté (https://twitter.com/cote), guest Jon Collins (https://twitter.com/jonno). Show Putting people on the line for data handling problems. Defining legit use for data: like updating on products bought, recommending other things to buy based on past buying. But, when it comes to holding you’re kid’s interest and other creepy thing, stuff comes into effect. Can’t hoard data now, have to justify why you’re doing it at least. So, sort of: if a third party gets ahold of the data, you need to spell out to the end-user what the data is and how it’ll be used. They started thinking about GDRP in 2005; it’s taken then 12 years for them to come up with this. Jon on GDPR, and more “GDPR, a topic about which I feel strangely sad [about]” Summarize it - ensure data can be encrypted, provide data on-demand, notify of data breaches (but just in unencrypted?), appoint CDO, somehow describe policy to end user (is this a set policy or can organizations differ it?), data must stay in EU (unless protection stuff is done off-shore) How’d this come about? “IT professionals expect that compliance with GDPR will require additional investment: over 80 percent of those surveyed expect GDPR-related spending to be at least $100,000.” (Book of all knowledge (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation)) In use (https://gigaom.com/2018/01/11/will-gdpr-fail-beyond-the-new-regulation/): “Facebook needs to ask people if it can use status posts as input to its advertising engines, whereas Google does not need to know someone is — its AdWords algorithms generate information based on search requests, location and so on, without being personally identifiable.” Meanwhile (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=deb992a367), “we will consent to have our privacy even more eroded than it already is.” What exactly should we care about with data privacy: how does an individual think through what Facebook does, Axcion, Target, the government, foreign governments, etc. - aka, Jon vs. The McNealy Privacy Principal (it’s dead, get over it). Generalizing to Jon’s five rules of cyber security (https://mailchi.mp/84acf426bb46/bulletin-january-26-2018-whence-cybersecurity-and-trust?e=b3386b4844). Background Covering tech (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=d6b6541917): “It’s a conundrum: when to say something out loud, even if it’s been said before?” @jonno (https://twitter.com/jonno) Jon’s author page on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jon-Collins/e/B0034P4X38) Newsletter (https://us17.campaign-archive.com/home/?u=a9c0ea0ab601731d6af8c675b&id=df3ab02947) Podcast (http://bluecube.libsyn.com/) Gigaom Column (https://gigaom.com/author/joncollins/) Credits: header image from warrenrandalcarr (https://pixabay.com/en/school-paper-binder-education-934051/). Special Guest: Jon Collins.