With a new U.S. presidential administration on the horizon, there are a lot of uncertainties for what it will mean for privacy and data protection. Many in the U.S. are considering what it will mean for domestic privacy regulation, but the rest of the world is watching closely as well. For example, what will a Trump administration mean for trans-border data flows? More specifically, Hogan Lovells consultant Quentin Archer asks "whether a Trump presidency poses any significant risks to the security" of millions of Europeans' data stored by U.S. corporations. In this post for Privacy Perspectives, Archer shares his thoughts on what this change will mean and what might be in store for the future of global data flows.
Full Story
02 December 2016
What will Trump mean for trans-border data flows?
![Default Article Featured Image_laptop-newspaper-global-article-090623[95].jpg](https://images.contentstack.io/v3/assets/bltd4dd5b2d705252bc/blt61f52659e86e1227/64ff207a8606a815d1c86182/laptop-newspaper-global-article-090623[95].jpg?width=3840&quality=75&format=pjpg&auto=webp)
Related stories
Is the 'privacy pro' role dead? Hardly, but it's complicated.
Notes from the Asia-Pacific region: A new year of momentum for privacy, AI governance and digital responsibility
FTC shares insight into its children's privacy priorities
The case for treating AI governance as a standalone imperative
Balancing innovation with fairness: What transparency in AI means for copyright law
