Israel's Privacy Protection Authority released recommendations for best practices with the development of smart home Internet of Things products. The guidance highlights how such devices require "the collection and processing of a lot of sensitive personal information that may, among other things, be leaked and publicly disclosed."
Full story
shareShare This
Related Stories
Osano acquires WireWheel, eyes increased vendor profile
Despite a general slowdown in the availability of investor funds for privacy technology vendors in the last year, Osano is making waves in the marketplace. Building on a USD25 million funding round in August, the vendor is now set to acquire enterprise-level privacy program management vendor WireWhe...
The IAPP-EY Professionalizing Organizational AI Governance Report 2023
The IAPP published the IAPP-EY Professionalizing Organizational AI Governance Report 2023, which reflects common organizational artificial intelligence governance trends in the privacy context. The report is based on 500 survey responses from 50 countries on AI questions posed in the IAPP-EY Privacy...
Israel's PPA to confirm databases are protected
Israel's Privacy Protection Authority announced it will require information management and data storage service providers to submit information on data security measures under the Privacy Protection Law. The PPA indicated data security safeguards must confirm compliance to reduce the risk of a data ...
Jamaica's Data Protection Act takes force
Jamaica's Data Protection Act took effect 1 Dec. The Office of the Information Commissioner announced a six-month grace period for data controllers to register with the office to confirm compliance. The OIC said data controllers can use the grace period to appoint a data protection officer, and are ...
CJEU clarifies DPAs' legal grounds for issuing fines under GDPR
The Court of Justice of the European Union reaffirmed the conditions data protection authorities can issue fines to data controllers under the EU General Data Protection Regulation. The CJEU ruled a data controller should not receive a fine unless the violation of the GDPR was committed "intentional...
Comments
If you want to comment on this post, you need to login.