Some items on our site have recently moved. Visit our News Hub for selected articles, special reports, podcasts and other resources.
Search results for undefined
[Clear]-
Fifth anniversary of the eruption of the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal in March 2018.
-
Since the General Data Protection Regulation took effect five years ago this week, more than 40 countries have enacted national privacy laws, most of which drew liberally from the canonical text of the EU law.
-
Google, beset with antitrust lawsuits, stands alone among the biggest tech companies in its adversarial relationship with California’s attorney general.
-
Meta Platforms faces another bruising year of global data protection enforcement in 2023
-
FTC needs to hire a new type of expert to study online harm: psychologists.
-
Khan's relationship with that staff was in tatters, according to a staff survey recently made public.
-
The count of countries with data protection laws more than doubled to 162 over the past dozen years, a total that includes a wide majority of the world’s nations, with new research suggesting data protection rules are approaching ubiquity.
-
Google announced that it will gradually change the access to personal data of apps on the Android platform
-
Google battle in two different courts against two different coalitions of enforcers.
-
No continent, however, has seen more data protection growth in recent years than Africa.