Blog - privacy law
Unlocking Your Digital Transformation Strategy
May 5, 2022As I continue to share my thoughts on the recently published 2022 RadarFirst Privacy Incident Benchmark Report, I turn my attention to the topic of unlocking your digital transformation strategy. The phrase “digital transformation” is commonly used, and highly desired in maturing companies and industries; however, successful outcomes require the same rigor as we take with, say, product testing.
Read MoreDiscovery to Assessment Timelines Down 20% for RadarFirst Users
Apr 26, 2022In our latest benchmark report, we explore incident management timelines from “Discovery to Assessment,” to learn more about how our users identify and triage incidents through privacy risk assessment. From this assessment, we’re able to demonstrate that across all industries, we have helped our customers reduce this time by over 20% through the continued use of our product.
Read MoreDecision Intelligence Is Key to Reaping Benefits of Digital Transformation
Apr 21, 2022As we set forth in our recent Guide to Digital Transformation for Privacy Incident Management, in order to reap the benefits of digital transformation, your organization must have decision intelligence; and RadarFirst is the decision intelligence platform you need to usher in digital transformation of your incident response management.
Read MoreFeatured Resources
Explore More2023 Privacy Incident Management Benchmarking Report
18 Functions to Prove Value with Intelligent Incident Response
7 Steps to Raise Your Incident Response IQ
Privacy Team Tabletop Exercise
What You Need to Know About Japan’s Amended APPI Law
Mar 31, 2022On 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.
Read More