Amid great number of existing frameworks in the area of risk management, compliance, privacy and security, new are still drafted and existing ones updated and refined. This is first and for all for big and global companies on which there is most pressure to stay compliant and ethical in whatever they do or intend to do.
PrivacyOps is an emerging framework that reimagines how to efficiently implement and operationalize privacy management throughout an organization in an agile manner.
Sysadminds need clarity, not clutter – and right now their systems are getting backlogged with excessive false positives. This is where implementing a vulnerability assessment solution that has the built-in intelligence for in-memory patch awareness comes in.
Third wave AI cybersecurity uses a proactive, singular AI algorithm applied to all data on the network and is a predictive approach that alerts analysts before an attack occurs.
While the legitimate interests ground for processing under the GDPR can be lawfully applied in many cases, a provisional balance should be established by data controllers with more safeguards for the protection of data subjects.
Reknown privacy expert, Dr. Anita Allen, shares her perspectives on digital ethics and privacy in this interview with Rafael Moscatel, Managing Director of Compliance and Privacy Partners.
The principle of programmatic advertising is at the heart of the case filed by Brave since 2018 where practice of real time bidding is alleged to have broken the data protection law.
As the video conferencing market continues to mature and evolve, there are plenty of reasons why key business sectors need to be vigilant about protecting communications and sensitive IP with proper authentication.
As biometrics technology becomes more widespread and sophisticated, there is growing concern about it crossing ethical lines through misuse or fraud.
Developers have been increasingly targeted by attackers. Compromising a single developer enables attackers to embed malicious code into a company's products. If that product is then used by other companies, the malware can spread to their systems in a supply chain attack.










