Data privacy is the footprint of our existence. It is our persona beyond ourselves, with traces of us scattered from birth certificates, Social Security numbers, shopping patterns, credit card histories, photographs, mugshots and health records. In a digital world, where memory is converted to 0’s and 1’s, then instantly transformed into a reproduction even in 3D, personal data is an urgent personal and collective subject. Those who wish to live anonymous lives must take extraordinary measur ...
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Episode 173 — U.S. Defense Department’s version 2.0 for Contractor Cybersecurity: CMMC 2.0
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The U.S. Defense Department is forcing its contractors and subcontractors to upgrade their cybersecurity practices through CMMC version 2.0. CMMC is shorthand for Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification. This affects virtually all suppliers to DOD that deal in Controlled Unclassified Information. 2.0 sets demanding cybersecurity standards in an …
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Episode 172 — May 2024 Data Privacy News: Vermont / Illinois Biometric Changes / Trends Report
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Vermont joined the “we have a data privacy code” group - almost a third of U.S. states now with a statute devoted to personal data privacy. Illinois modifies its code on biometrics to soften business costs of compliance. DataGrail’s 2024 Data Privacy Trends report focuses on a surge in data subject requests. Join Yugo Nagashima of Frost Brown Todd,…
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Episode 171 — A Global Privacy Statement: How to Draft One
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Privacy statements - how can one be written that applies globally? That seems like an impossible, even hopeless, challenge. Laws change regularly, even within countries and groupings like the EU. Rules differ. There are no “international” laws making data privacy a commonly regulated matter. This episode presents an approach to a comprehensive data…
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Episode 170 — E-Skimming at ATM’s, Stores, and Gas Pumps: What we can do about it
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Skimming—once defined as an internal business fraud of insiders taking money off the top of a company’s cash flow. E-skimming - the growing theft of personal digital information to steal funds and benefits from individuals. A May 22, 2024 New York Times report focused on how food stamp holders are victimized by crime rings when their benefit cards …
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Episode 169 — Privacy, Artificial Intelligence, and the Sales Industry
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How do organizations convert leads into revenue? How can they do this effectively while being privacy-conscious, not bombarding people with unwanted cold calls or messages? In Episode 169, the Data Privacy Detective converses with Thomas Ryan, CEO and founder of Bigly Sales. https://biglysales.com. Learn how the sales industry is undergoing rapid t…
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Episode 168 — April 2024 Data Privacy Developments
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Progress towards a U.S. federal data privacy code? Consider the APRA, a bipartisan congressional effort in that direction - and its hot spots and chances. Learn about the Maryland Online Data Privacy Act and how it challenges big tech’s preferences. Discover what Max Schremms, AI, and birthdays have in common. Episode 169 explores these topics from…
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Episode 167 — Colorado act to guard our brains: the Privacy of neural data
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In April 2024 Colorado became the first U.S. state to declare neural data - what goes on in our brains - to be “sensitive data” subject to its Privacy Act. Neural data will be treated the same as medical and other sensitive data such as fingerprints and facial images. The law will permit individuals to access, delete and correct their neural data. …
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Episode 166 — Digital Identity Systems: Estonia
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For about ten years, Estonia has pioneered a digital ID system for its 1.3 million citizens. Every Estonian receives a digital identity at birth or later. Estonians use this e-ID for a host of interactions with government and the private sector. The e-ID is not guarded zealously like a U.S. Social Security number. Instead, it is a kind of public ke…
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Episode 165 — Health data, HIPAA, and Privacy
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Our medical and health data are valuable - both to promote public health and to enrich data brokers selling our sensitive personal information without our consent. HIPAA is the U.S. federal statute intended to safeguard our medical information - but it does not cover many of the ways our information is released and shared, with unintended consequen…
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Episode 164 — March 2024 Data Privacy News
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Episode 164 covers three March 2024 developments: Florida bans social media platform accounts of children under 14 - and more; Illinois modifies its pioneering biometrics laws; and President Biden and the House of Representatives act together about the sale of personal information to countries “of concern.” Consider how social media platforms are a…
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Episode 163 — You and Your Data Identity: How data private can we be?
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Identity Orchestration - the difference between Identity and ID. Join Gerry Gebel, IT veteran, now Head of Standards at Strata Identity - https://strata.io. Gerry leads an effort to develop Identity Query Language, a policy orchestration standard. Strata Identity pioneered the concept of Identity Orchestration, which helps organizations integrate a…
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Episode 162 — Public Records and Privacy: Rethinking what’s public about us
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From the day of birth, and perhaps even earlier, we become public data subjects. Without our express consent, our personal information is collected and poured out like salt from a shaker because of public records laws. There has been little federal attention to this for 50 years, and state laws vary. Tune in for an exploration of many ways in which…
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Episode 161 — Privacy and the Online Onslaught
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Privacy - “freedom from unauthorized invasion,” says Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, or “the quality or state of being apart from company or observation.” The Detective did not authorize an online onslaught. But every day my computer and phone are bombarded with unsolicited ads and messages. My digital space is invaded by demands for my attention.…
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Episode 160 — Data Privacy News from February 2024: California and Florida
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Join Yugo Nagashima, data privacy and technology attorney at Frost Brown Todd, as he and the Data Privacy Detective discusses two major topics from February 2024. Learn how DoorDash and California settled a dispute under California’s privacy law that raises important issues for business and consumers. DoorDash was accused of failing to inform custo…
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Episode 159 — Data Privacy and Cookies: Why we should rename Cookies as the Collectors that they are
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Who doesn’t like cookies? When a website posts a notice about cookies, that sounds like a free offer for something good. But cookies on the internet are not good or bad. They aren’t cookies at all in any real sense. They are simply embedded technology that attract and use information about us and what we do on a website. Aside from software that en…
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Data Privacy and Tracking: How to combine privacy protection and quality data for Digital Companies User consent, ad-blocking, and tracking prevention are on the rise, along with increasingly privacy-centric regulation. Companies want to understand what users want from products and services. This depends on accurate datasets of user experience. How…
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Episode 157 — Data Privacy Developments from January 2024: Videos, State Codes, and App Stores
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Tune in for three top January 2024 data privacy developments in the Detective’s monthly update. Yugo Nagashima and Brion St. Amour, data privacy and tech attorneys at Frost Brown Todd LLP, join the Detective for a monthly roundup. Explore: How the Video Privacy Protection Act (a U.S. law from video rentals days) is alive in the internet age and a c…
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Episode 156 — Data Privacy and Your Computer - The Offerings of Tech Giants
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You buy a new computer. You push the power button. Your screen blazes with tips and prompts, not from the device maker but from tech giants like Microsoft and Google. You rush to get started with offerings from these giants and other iconic providers. What about your personal information and how your privacy will be affected by your launch on the n…
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