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Stay informed on GDPR regulations and data protection with the latest news, insights, and compliance strategies in our info security hub.

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Background for this topic.

GDPR is the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, in force since 25 May 2018. It governs the processing of personal data by organizations in the EU and, in some circumstances, organizations elsewhere that offer services to or monitor people in the EU. It sets principles and lawful bases for processing, gives individuals rights over their data, and defines duties for controllers and processors.

For security practitioners, GDPR requires risk-appropriate technical and organizational measures to protect personal data, such as access control, encryption or pseudonymization where appropriate, resilience, and regular testing. Privacy by design and by default should shape system and data-flow decisions. A personal-data breach may require notifying the relevant supervisory authority without undue delay and, where feasible, within 72 hours of awareness; affected individuals may also need notification when the risk is high. These obligations make asset and data inventories, processor oversight, retention controls, and breach playbooks operationally important.

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Bank Info Security 1 year, 10 months ago

Dutch Agency Fines Clearview AI 30M Euros for Data Scraping

5th Nation to Investigate Software Firm Imposes Largest GDPR Penalty, Bans UseThe Dutch data regulator is the latest agency to fine artificial intelligence company Clearview AI over its facial data harvesting and other privacy violations of GDPR rules, joining regulatory agencies in France, Italy, Greece and the United Kingdom.

The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Dutch DPA) has imposed a fine of €30.5 million ($33.7 million) against facial recognition firm Clearview AI for violating the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the European Union (E.U.) by building an "illegal database with billions of photos of faces," including those of Dutch citizens