Companies selling wearable devices should start with privacy by design to better comply with a growing body of privacy laws, said Duane Morris privacy attorney Michelle Donovan during the law firm’s webinar Tuesday.
Online personal data isn't free for the taking and "the law must stop this mass data looting," George Washington University Law School professor Daniel Solove and Boston University School of Law professor Woodrow Hartzog argued in a paper published Thursday.
Consumers are increasingly acting to protect their privacy, Forrester Senior Analyst Stephanie Liu blogged Wednesday.
Regulate data, not AI, said Emily Tucker, Georgetown Law Center on Privacy & Technology executive director, in an op-ed Tuesday for Tech Policy Press.
Having a poor reputation for data privacy could attract regulators, warned Snapchat Product Counsel Dareus Robinson on a Thursday webinar by the compliance vendor TrustArc.
To avoid lawsuits under the California Invasion of Privacy Act (CIPA), companies should adopt a defense-first posture that emphasizes transparency, making themselves more difficult targets for litigation, said Matthew Pearson, a Womble Bond privacy lawyer.
Privacy is an ever-evolving landscape, meaning that company privacy policies, technologies and teams must be constantly updated, panelists said Wednesday during a webinar hosted by Didomi, a consent-management software vendor. With enforcement actions by regulators increasing and legislators continuing to implement new laws, companies must stay on top of the latest developments, they added.
The Network Advertising Initiative will require members to confirm they don’t have ties to countries of concern as defined under DOJ’s global data transfer rule, starting in 2026, NAI said Wednesday.
The IAPP on Tuesday unveiled a guide to Europe's digital law landscape for business, policy and tech audiences. The guide explains various digital regulations, changes being made, whom the measures affect and where the main risks and opportunities lie. Among other things, it maps the intersection of the GDPR with other laws, such as the AI Act, Digital Markets Act, Digital Services Act and Data Governance Act.
Ketch announced an age-gating and video-consent product for addressing kids’ privacy law compliance and wiretapping litigation. The compliance vendor said its release of “dynamic consent” tools responds to a growing number of age-appropriate design code and other age-verification laws in the states, as well as increasing litigation against businesses from plaintiffs’ attorneys under laws like the California Invasion of Privacy Act and the federal Video Privacy Protection Act.