Most Popular Content – Page 108
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SessionPKWARE - Exposed: Keeping Your Organization’s Sensitive Data Safe from Careless End Users
While data security is at the forefront for many IT and security teams, for most employees, security is an afterthought. They just want to be able to access the data they need when and where they need it so they can do their jobs. And if security practices feel too cumbersome or complicated, they’ll find workarounds—or worse, skip security altogether. This creates dangerous vulnerabilities, especially in today’s hybrid office/remote environment. Organizations must find the critical balance between data security and usability so end users don’t bypass important practices wherever they are in order to get work done.
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SessionData Retention: To Protect Data, Don’t Do Everything in the Cloud
As data increases for the majority of companies, there are a great deal more challenges. Question marks remain around cloud storage and data retention.
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SessionGlobal Data Protection and Privacy Law Developments: A Global Overview of the Data Protection and Privacy Law Sector
This panel will bring together experts on global data protection and privacy law developments to discuss the international outlook, exploring what changes are to be expected, which countries will be next to bring through laws and which won’t.
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SessionInsider/Internal Threats: Why Boards Should Never Take This for Granted
From employees accidentally clicking on malicious links, to sabotage, theft of data and unauthorised access, companies have plenty of potential insider cybersecurity threats to consider.
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SessionInternational Data Flows: The Future Under the New SCCs
In June, the European Commission finalised the modern SCCs in a bid to restore normal EU-US data transfer agreements.
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SessionGlobal Data Protection and Privacy Law Developments USA: Will Next Year see a Federal Privacy Law Under the Biden Administration?
Many more states within the US are leading the legislative charge to follow California, Colorado and Virginia to pass Privacy Acts into law. From New York and Massachusetts to North Carolina and Ohio, moves are afoot.
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SessionExterro - Conquering a CPRA Data Retention Strategy in 60 Days
The California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) comes into effect on January 1, 2023. Among its new requirements is a new data retention provision. Personal and sensitive information must be disposed of when its purpose has been fulfilled, and the organization must disclose the retention policy at the time of collection. And the data retention policies apply to data collected on or after January 1, 2022. Under CPRA, companies can no longer simply hold on to individuals’ personal data forever, they must have robust data retention and disposal practices.
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SessionRansomware is not out of control, it is everything from cryptocurrencies to users
This panel will explore a controversial topic: what is more out of control at the moment, ransomware attacks or our susceptibility due to outside forces such as cryptocurrencies and the very users/staff of our companies?
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SessionCovid-19 Vaccines, Data Protection and the Great HR Debate
The roll out of the Covid-19 vaccine has employers thinking - will they obtain, and how might they manage data on employee’s covid-19 vaccination status? And if they are collecting this, how will this affect the company’s thinking on a return to the office strategy?
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SessionThe Role of Privacy in ESG (sponsored by OneTrust)
With more focus on ethical data use, more companies are assessing their approach to environment, social and governance (ESG) criteria. Investors are looking beyond financial indicators to assess long-term value. Employees, consumers, and clients are also important stakeholders are demanding accountability when it comes to handling sensitive data and protecting information.
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SessionSpotting the signs of insider risk – and stopping a security incident before it happens
When it comes to cybersecurity and the risks that go alongside it, we know that people aren’t perfect – they get hacked, they make mistakes, and they also break the rules. And as employees continue to enjoy the flexibility of remote work, these human-activated risks to email security are surging as at-home employees continue to blur the lines between work and home life. Legacy technologies cannot keep pace, relying on static policies that frustrate and, ultimately, fail to solve the problem, leaving organisations vulnerable to both inbound and outbound data breaches and attacks.
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SessionData Breaches: The Brand Battle for CMOs After Your Data is Breached
Fresh cyber attacks and data breaches across Volkswagen, Audi, McDonalds and Electronic Arts highlight the growing cybersecurity and data threat. So what can marketing leaders do about preventing and reacting to these crises?
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SessionGlobal Data Protection and Privacy Law Developments: POPIA; The First Three Months
South Africa’s Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) came into enforcement from 1st July 2021.
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SessionArtificial Intelligence/Machine Learning: Regulate the Usage, Not the Technology
Many arguments that surround the regulation of AI discuss how this will stifle technology and innovation. What is the regulations centred more around the usage of AI than of the technological advancement?
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SessionUK Data Protection Index Panel
The UK Data Protection Index is produced by Data Protection World Forum and The DPO Centre. Each quarter the Index provides a glimpse into the changing attitudes and sentiments of Data Protection Officers across the UK.
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SessionHow easy is it to phish your business?
As cybersecurity and cyberthreats become more prevalent in our personal and working lives, businesses have invested in solutions like antivirus software and endpoint protection to try and secure their employees, data and intellectual property. While these measures have been effective to some extent, we still hear about ransomware and malware attacks in the news almost every day. Do you know how secure your organization is and if you’re vulnerable to this type of attack?
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SessionInternational Data Flows: EU and UK data flows: The Future of the Post-Brexit Agreement
As detailed by The Law Society in the UK, “The outward flow of data from the UK to the EU/EEA remains unaffected since the UK government has determined that it considers all EU 27 and EEA member states to be adequate for the purposes of data protection.”
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SessionDigital Advertising: “Walled garden” approaches and implications on competition law
With Google’s announcement that it will phase out third-party cookies by 2022, it’s clear that those walls, which keep so much of the data inside, are about to get even higher.
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SessionSocial Media Data Breaches: Serious or Just a “Scrape”?
In August, Facebook suspended the accounts of NYU researchers who were investigating political ads on the social media platform. Facebook stated that the researchers were “gathered data by creating a browser extension that was programmed to evade our detection systems and scrape data such as usernames, ads, links to user profiles”. But the discussions and arguments around scraping does not end there, as there are endless questions on its legality, and the fact that big companies use this BUT don’t want it used against them.
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SessionGlobal Data Protection and Privacy Law Developments, Canada; Reforms, regional developments, and new regulations: How Canada is developing their Data Protection Laws
A huge number of firms in Canada are preparing themselves for changes to the Data Protection and Privacy Laws in Canada, but are these reforms going to happen?









