Cyber Daily: Prolonged GDPR Investigations; National Guard Lends Cyber Help in Maryland

In her newest Brussels Report, Catherine Stupp examines why some privateness and safety incidents take regulators see you later to analyze. Under the General Data Protection Regulation, nationwide government can paintings in combination, and if instances contain shoppers in multiple nation, more than one regulators can weigh in. Plus, 20 of 27 European Union international locations stated they don’t have sufficient monetary, technical or workforce assets.
In her latest Brussels Report, Catherine Stupp examines why some privacy and security incidents take regulators so long to investigate. Under the General Data Protection Regulation, national authorities can work together, and if cases involve consumers in more than one country, multiple regulators can weigh in. Plus, 20 of 27 European Union countries said they don’t have enough financial, technical or staff resources.Original article
Author: Wsj

WSJ online coverage of breaking news and current headlines from the US and around the world. Top stories, photos, videos, detailed analysis and in-depth reporting.

Wsj has recently written 9 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Make no mistake: The fundamental premise of Facebook’s business—gathering more data about us in order to reach us with more-targeted and effective advertising—will stay the same, writes Christopher Mims". (March 7, 2019)
  2. "Millions of smartphone users confess their most intimate secrets to apps, including personal health information. Unbeknown to most people, in many cases that data is being shared with someone else: Facebook". (February 22, 2019)
  3. "The Wall Street Journal’s testing of over 70 applications that handle sensitive information turned up 11 that were sending at least some data to Facebook. Five have now reduced or ended data transfers to the social media giant". (February 25, 2019)
  4. "A recent cyberattack on one of Freddie Macs vendors showed how large organizations are vulnerable to breaches targeted not only at themselves but also at companies they hire, WSJ Pros Elaine Chen reports. Loan application information was on the vendors system hit by a ransomware attack, prompting Freddie Mac to warn borrowers and regulators about the compromise". (July 21, 2020)
  5. "Ryan Kaji made his name opening toys in YouTube videos, amassing 23 million subscribers to his Ryans World channel and more than $20 million a year in advertising revenue". (December 23, 2019)
  6. "A survey found just 52% of employees were optimistic about Facebook’s future, down from 84% a year earlier. The darker mood comes amid a dropping share price and disclosures of privacy violations". (November 14, 2018)
  7. "The Department of Justice is investigating whether television station owners violated antitrust law in ways that inflated local television advertising prices". (July 26, 2018)
  8. "Colleges are turning to the corporate-marketing playbook to better identify and appeal to prospective adult students, crunching consumer databases to tailor their pitches". (July 14, 2018)
  9. "Popular health and fitness apps scrambled to stop sending sensitive personal information to Facebook after The Wall Street Journal reported Friday many were transmitting detailed information about topics including their users’ weight and menstrual cycles". (February 24, 2019)
Posted on  , , , , , , ,