Privacy metrics have emerged as a key measure to improve privacy program performance and maturity in terms of customer trust, risk mitigation, and business enablement.
This work examines the GDPR regarding the resulting requirements for SIEM systems.
This paper argues that traditional privacy law has a great deal to learn from the guidelines for informed consent that applies in federally funded biomedical and behavioral research.
The chapter tells the story of the Target breach and the lessons that can be learned from it about the shortcomings of data security law.
This paper aims to critically assess the information duties set out in the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and national adaptations when the purpose of processing is scientific research.
In this work, authors are providing three solutions to enable GDPR compliance in business processes.
This Article analyses the framework of rules governing the processing of personal data for scientific research purposes established by the European Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
This paper aim to help overcome a perceived paradox between the two objectives of innovation and privacy/data protection, in particular in relation to data scenarios where organisations are open to personal data they control to be reused for innovative purposes.
This article aims to provide an overview of the new rules to consider where scientific projects include the processing of personal health data, genetic data or biometric data and other kinds of sensitive information.
When complying with appropriate safeguards, the processing of personal data for scientifc research under the GDPR benefts from a special regime which is of interest for biobank research.
The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) allows researchers to process and further use personal data under the ‘research exemption’.
This paper’s primary focus is on some problems and constraints imposed to Big Data analytics according to the newly introduced GDPR.