The GDPR aims to address the changes in the digital landscape and increase an individual's
rights over personal data.
Not exact matches
In Britain and the European Union, citizens enjoy
data protection
rights and can assert control
over their
personal information if they choose.
If the skeptics are
right, Wood writes, Common Core «will damage the quality of K — 12 education for many students; strip parents and local communities of meaningful influence
over school curricula; centralize a great deal of power in the hands of federal bureaucrats and private interests; push for the aggregation and use of large amounts of
personal data on students without the consent of parents; usher in an era of even more abundant and more intrusive standardized testing; and absorb enormous sums of public funding that could be spent to better effect on other aspects of education.»
«Also, schools will need to develop new processes to enable them to deal with the new enhanced
rights that children have
over their
personal data.
Personal observation and knowledge
over time trumps
data collection and reports, and I suspect he's
right about the fish, though the algae and anaerobic moves it a tad away from boiling to death.
Fundamentally, an update of current EU
data protection laws, the GDPR aims to give control
over personal data back to consumers by establishing new individual
rights, while at the same time beefing up obligations of the companies that collect
personal data.
Developing laws and policies on privacy
rights in the cloud could help strengthen my control
over how my
personal data / information is used by Google, Facebook, Twitter, and other social media and enable me to anonymously search the Internet.