When Advocate General Jääskinen delivered his Opinion in the Google Spain case in June of last year (as commented upon on this blog here), it seemed to many (myself included) that it was the last nail in the coffin of the controversial «right to be forgotten» provided for in the EU's
Proposed Data Protection Regulation.
This is undoubtedly a far cry from the «privacy by design» ideal promoted by the European Commission and enshrined in
the Proposed Data Protection Regulation.
Not exact matches
On 3 November, Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Donna Shalala
proposed new
regulations that researchers must follow in order to access and use electronic human subject information — to offer federal
protection of medical and health research
data generated, stored, or transmitted electronically.
Even before Smith took over the committee, he co-signed a letter in December 2012 calling on the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) to release the «secret
data» behind
proposed air pollution
regulations.
No other issue symbolised the need for this balance better than the «one stop shop» principle under the
proposed EU
data protection regulation — the sole competence of one single regulator over the same controller all over the European Union.
2015 was no different in this regard as much attention focused on the Court's judgment in Schrems (discussed here), which invalidated the 15 year old Safe Harbor
data sharing agreement between the EU and the US, and on the culmination of four years of negotiation on the new Proposed General Data Protection Regulation in Decem
data sharing agreement between the EU and the US, and on the culmination of four years of negotiation on the new
Proposed General
Data Protection Regulation in Decem
Data Protection Regulation in December.
It warns that
data breaches are likely to become more costly, with the proposed new European Data Protection Regulation «expected to bring mandatory breach notification requirements&raq
data breaches are likely to become more costly, with the
proposed new European
Data Protection Regulation «expected to bring mandatory breach notification requirements&raq
Data Protection Regulation «expected to bring mandatory breach notification requirements».