In the post-GDPR world, it seems the remit of what counts as data as a valuable commodity is becoming ever broader, with the most recent example in the context of the beautiful game.
Mozilla's first-ever Internet Health Report highlights the key challenges affecting the creation of an open, safe and accessible Internet – Big Tech’s growing power, the collapse of privacy especially with IoT security, and the spread of fake news. All of these challenges point to deeper problems with the Internet.
The problem with Manifest V3 is that it limits the number of built-in and user-added rules for extensions installed by an individual user. Since at the core of any ad blocker extension is the filtering rules that teach it to detect ads, such restrictions can become a real snag.
Multinationals face difficult and unique data privacy and security compliance challenges to successfully meet the ongoing waves of government regulations. To meet these challenges, multinationals must have enhanced visibility across their global key assets and comprehensive controls.
SSI as a digital identity model not only keeps PII safe but also provides digital guardianship for patients by placing conservatorship of their digital wallet and credentials with their trustees.
Washington’s My Health My Data Act (“MHMDA”) broad scope and definitions will undoubtedly expand its reach to data not normally considered health data and businesses who do not traditionally consider themselves to be health care providers or to be collecting consumer health data.
Recent federal directives on finding and reducing cyber risks correctly, along with the change from traditional cybersecurity methods to managing hybrid attack surfaces, show how complicated things are getting when it comes to federal cybersecurity.
With an increase in legislation, the privacy landscape is a moving target for brands. Businesses are diverting precious resources away from improving personalization relevance to maintaining global privacy compliance. The two shouldn’t be working against each other.
As we move toward a more open data sharing future, businesses must prepare now to tackle the future legislation and data privacy laws that will inevitably be placed upon them and ensure all data moving through its systems is accurate and trusted.
As more states pass not just comprehensive privacy laws, but narrow legislation that focuses on children’s privacy, data brokers, and hopefully, the emerging trend of privacy-for-profit, the pressure to find solutions that support compliance, while saving resources in an unsettled market, is only going to grow.










