Practitioners in several fields of non-legal work, such as «residential real estate brokering services,» «insurance brokering services,» and medicine would not need to disclose their clients,
though federal privacy requirements limit how much the state can require to be made public.
Not exact matches
NEW YORK — An audit of Facebook's
privacy practices for the
Federal Trade Commission found no problems even
though the company knew at the time that a data - mining firm improperly obtained private data from millions of users — raising questions about the usefulness of such audits.
By the end of this year
though, the provisions of the
federal Digital
Privacy Act that deal with reporting requirements are expected to come into effect.
Not only is Canada long overdue in its statutorily mandated review of PIPEDA, our
federal privacy protection law, but it seems as
though significant elements of the law may soon be undermined significantly, as the United States Trade Representative is reportedly pushing for strict limitations on
privacy protections as part of the Trans Pacific Partnership that Canada recently joined.