GDPR

Securing the future of the data sharing economy

Recent data regulatory advances such as GDPR and open banking have not only had huge implications on businesses, but also its impact on consumers. More than ever, consumers have an informed view and control over their personal data. This increased consumer awareness has driven the necessity for organisations to ensure effective customer data management and…


Recent data regulatory advances such as GDPR and open banking have not only had huge implications on businesses, but also its impact on consumers. More than ever, consumers have an informed view and control over their personal data. This increased consumer awareness has driven the necessity for organisations to ensure effective customer data management and safety, or else risk significant financial and reputational damage. In today’s data-driven business world, this has only raised the stakes.  

The power of data is enabling huge insights to be achieved, helping businesses make more informed decisions for its products and services, and also gain better understanding of customers and the marketplace it serves. Data has become such a valuable commodity for modern business, that everyone from junior level to the C-suite wants to delve into the treasure of data to uncover new insights and possibilities.  

  • A new era in data awareness
  • The war for encrypted data
  • How safe is your data in the cloud and elsewhere?

Image Credit: Shutterstock

Image Credit: Shutterstock

(Image: © Image Credit: Alexskopje / Shutterstock)

Data sharing leads the new data economy

Accessing data will only become a more seamless experience, as the notion of data sharing revolutionises the data economy. Through cloud-built data warehouses, select datasets can be shared securely and in real-time, both internally and externally throughout the busi

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GDPR

Tech Tuesday: Data privacy and synthetic data generation tools

Data has become simultaneously the most valuable asset most organisations own and the most heavily regulated one. GDPR fines exceeded €4.5 billion cumulatively by early 2026. The EU AI Act’s classification of training data quality as a high-risk system requirement has made data provenance a legal obligation rather than a best practice…

Data has become simultaneously the most valuable asset most organisations own and the most heavily regulated one. GDPR fines exceeded €4.5 billion cumulatively by early 2026. The EU AI Act’s classification of training data quality as a high-risk system requirement has made data provenance a legal obligation rather than a best practice…
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GDPR

Researcher reveals official White House app is one command away from tracking your precise location every 4.5 minutes – app can also inject code to dodge cookie consent, GDPR banners, and paywalls

White House app contains code to hide cookie options, GDPR banners, and paywalls – and collects extensive user data…

White House app contains code to hide cookie options, GDPR banners, and paywalls – and collects extensive user data…
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GDPR

Viva la revolución: LinkedIn profile visitor lists belong to the people, says Noyb

GDPR Article 15 doesn’t care if you want to make money by selling users’ data back to them A LinkedIn feature the average non-paying user likely only glances past could end up setting a legal precedent in the EU regarding how companies treat customer data that they’ve processed. …

GDPR Article 15 doesn’t care if you want to make money by selling users’ data back to them A LinkedIn feature the average non-paying user likely only glances past could end up setting a legal precedent in the EU regarding how companies treat customer data that they’ve processed. …
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GDPR

Estonia is the rare EU country opposing bans on children’s social media use

In short: Estonia and Belgium are the only two EU member states to have declined the Jutland Declaration, an October 2025 pan-European commitment to restrict children’s access to social media. Estonia’s ministers argue that age-based bans are unenforceable, that children will find ways around them, and that the correct approach is to enforce the GDPR against

In short: Estonia and Belgium are the only two EU member states to have declined the Jutland Declaration, an October 2025 pan-European commitment to restrict children’s access to social media. Estonia’s ministers argue that age-based bans are unenforceable, that children will find ways around them, and that the correct approach is to enforce the GDPR against […]
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