Showing results for virg one bet promo code mlai

FPF at CPDP 2022: Panels and Side Events
[…] the following months. May 23: Global panel on post-COVID data protection; AI Act in the employment context The first day of the CPDP conference was a busy one for FPF’s Gabriela Zanfir-Fortuna. She started early in a speaking role on a panel about ‘Data Protection Regulation Post-COVID: the Current Landscape of Discussions in Europe, […]

New Report on Limits of “Consent” in China’s Data Protection Law – First in a Series for Joint Project with Asian Business Law Institute
[…] fraud. This requires frameworks to realign the role of consent by returning consent to the position that it occupied in the very first data protection frameworks as one of several, equal legal bases for processing of personal data, rather than as the default or even sole basis for processing personal data. First Report: Consent […]

When is a Biometric No Longer a Biometric?
[…] minutiae template, or a voiceprint, can be extracted, and keystroke patterns or rhythms, gait patterns or rhythms, and sleep, health, or exercise data that contain identifying information. Virginia §59.1-571 “Biometric data” means data generated by automatic measurements of an individual’s biological characteristics, such as a fingerprint, voiceprint, eye retinas, irises, or other unique biological […]

FPF Report: Automated Decision-Making Under the GDPR – A Comprehensive Case-Law Analysis
[…] based solely on automated processing of personal data, including profiling, which produces legal effects concerning an individual or similarly affects that individual: Article 22. This provision enshrines one of the “rights of the data subject”, particularly the right not to be subject to decisions of that nature (i.e., ‘qualifying ADM’), which has been interpreted […]

Diverging fining policies of European DPAs: is there room for coherent enforcement of the GDPR?
[…] their own body of case-law and created practice around how these criteria are applied without formalizing such policies. The DPA of the German State of Bavaria was one of the first to publish non-binding guidance on the matter: in September 2016, it revealed it would devote particular attention to previous data protection infringements and […]

FPF New Resource Takes the Guesswork out of Buying Privacy Tech
[…] which categories of functions these privacy technologies fall into will help you select the business-level tools and services that best suit your business needs. Below is just one of several Framework case studies that illustrate hypothetical scenarios in which you might use this to move from a general business outcome towards a specific buy […]

What the Biden Executive Order on Digital Assets Means for Privacy
[…] individual’s privacy while deterring criminal activity. This intersection between consumer privacy and the transparency needed to monitor criminal activity gets to the heart of the Order. On one hand, a United States CBDC would provide certain data security and privacy protections for consumers under the current rules and regulations imposed on financial institutions. The […]

FPF at the 2022 IAPP Global Privacy Summit
[…] Hogan Lovells, Britanie Hall, Product Counsel, Speech and Assistant at Google Speaker, and Alexandra Ross, Senior Director, Senior Data Protection, Use Ethics Counsel at Autodesk. During the one-hour session, the panel discussed how automated decision-making is an upcoming trend in global regulation, current U.S. regulation of algorithms, pending EU AI regulation, examples of fair […]

The ebb and flow of trans-Atlantic data transfers: It’s the geopolitics, stupid!*
[…] the clouds of U.S. technology companies, of which 80% are with only five suppliers. With the EU having no large digital platform companies, data transfers are a one-way street. Besides supply chain dependencies, these companies operate proprietary ecosystems, which offer limited interoperability and portability of data and applications, resulting in EU data being locked […]

Reading the Signs: the Political Agreement on the New Transatlantic Data Privacy Framework
[…] produce legal effects and actually be able to support transfers from the EU to the US. Especially since the US side still has to pass at least one Executive Order to provide for the agreed-upon new safeguards. This means that transfers of personal data from the EU to the US may still be blocked […]