Key Takeaways IAPP Webinar: Privacy Incident Management Simplified

Feb 9, 2023

In case you missed our latest webinar on simplifying privacy incident management, we’ve got you covered. Continue reading to learn the key takeaways from the event.

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Remove Subjectivity and Streamline Data Breach Decisioning: Lessons from Live Q&A

Dec 8, 2022

In the latest session of The Privacy Collective, we discussed how privacy teams can improve consistency in incident response, build team collaboration, and eliminate the subjectivity inherent in breach decisioning. Continue reading to learn the key takeaways from the session.

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Recession-Proof Your Privacy Program

Jun 16, 2022

With talks of an impending recession, now is a critical time for organizations to turn inwards and focus on costly legacy operations, like mitigating privacy risks and streamlining incident management.

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What You Need to Know About Japan’s Amended APPI Law

Mar 31, 2022

On April 1, 2022, amendments to Japan’s Act on Protection of Personal Information (Amended APPI) will come online, offering new guidelines, definitions, and requirements for data incidents and breaches that impact Japanese citizens. Japan’s data laws have already placed it at the top of list of countries concerned with protecting individual data rights – it was the first country to negotiate a reciprocal “adequacy” agreement with the EU, meaning data can flow between the EU and the designated “adequate” nation without any further data measures being put in place. 

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Scaling a Privacy Program for the Future

Mar 24, 2022

In a special executive session of The Privacy Collective, Greg Sikes, Vice President of Product at RadarFirst, talks with Ron Whitworth, Chief Privacy Officer of Truist, one of America’s largest new banks, about what it takes to prioritize and scale privacy teams for the future.

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Changes to California Breach Notification Laws

Mar 3, 2022

California’s new privacy law, the California Privacy Rights Act﹘CPRA for short﹘doesn’t go into effect until Jan 1 2023, but its implications for the treatment of employee data and its confusing “look back” provision already have a lot of people talking. CPRA isn’t a replacement of the existing California Privacy Protection Action (CPPA), but rather serves to define, modify, and extend the laws on the books. One significant extension is that the older law exempted employee data from many of the requirements applied to “consumer” data and personal information. Learn more in the blog.

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