Changes are on the horizon for European Union data privacy and organizations that use or want to use EU citizen's private data need to be aware of these significant changes.
Changes are on the horizon for European Union data privacy and organizations that use or want to use EU citizen's private data need to be aware of these significant changes.
In a surprising court ruling, a Dutch woman has taken her estranged mother to court over her refusal to delete pictures of her children off of her personal Facebook account. The mother claimed that by her refusing to do so she is actually violating the EU's GDPR (data protection) law. She won.
The European Union's new GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) becomes effective on May 25th, 2018. Here's what we understand about the privacy law: what the implications are, who will be impacted by them, and how businesses can remain compliant.