NZ Gov’t takes steps to ensure ‘highly digitalised’ MNCs pay their fair share
Will target online giants with digital tax
Will target online giants with digital tax
The cost of getting privacy wrong is becoming significant, and a cost that can undo hard work spent designing products and services which look amazing, but fail to meet regulatory requirements and customer expectations of privacy, write Hayley Miller and Campbell Featherstone of Kensington Swan.
The time to prepare for a data-driven future is before it arrives— not after, reports ISACA.
Revera and Nyriad develop system to help government agencies simplify management of trusted information
Pressing issues with our outdated privacy law may finally get a kickstart on 23 September, writes Nelson Siva of Solution Dynamics
Digital businesses have redefined the economic playing field. The effects of Brexit may be our first big test of the capacity of digital business models to weather significant external forces of change.
New Zealand organisations that collect, store, use, and share personal information should review their privacy policies and practices to confirm that these remain up-to-date, writes Ross Johnston of Kensington Swan.
European Union data-protection reform proposals could undermine basic privacy rights globally, a growing chorus of critics say.
Despite privacy concerns and doubts over its usefulness, a plan to track passengers entering or leaving the European Union in a series of national databases is likely to become reality by the end of the year.
Google is planning a series of seven public meetings across Europe to discuss people's right to be forgotten with the public's right to information.
European Union lawmakers believe that micro-licensing could solve all user generated content problems (UCG) according to a European Commission document leaked on Monday.
The European Union will spend €1 billion on improving its digital services and high-speed broadband networks as part of a deal agreed on Wednesday.
The European Union is considering helping to fund a $185-million project to lay an undersea cable from Brazil to Europe.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande will discuss this week how Europe can keep email traffic away from U.S. servers.
European Union leaders have given themselves room for manoeuvre in implementing new data protection laws, while pledging to introduce them in a “timely” fashion.