HMRC seeks new Data Protection Officer to help deal with GDPR This article is sponsored by:
The £118k Data Protection Officer role will help HMRC navigate the complex and demanding GDPR regulation that is due to come into effect in May 2018.
The £118k Data Protection Officer role will help HMRC navigate the complex and demanding GDPR regulation that is due to come into effect in May 2018.
There's potential for a clash between automated compliance management in security and the move to the end user community as the source of future innovations.
The UN held its first Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems group meeting last week, but there's no sign of any particular urgency to make any decisions.
Are enterprise vendors ready to respond to policymaker oversight? Are policymakers sufficiently knowledgeable about technology to make informed policies? The answer in both cases is 'no.' That's a dangerous mix.
Who will manage the unintended consequences of labor optimization that is aided by machine learning and other forms of artificial intelligence? Workday steers a narrow course.
AI is already with us even if we don't know it. The problem is the manner in which it impacts people's lives through the relentless drive to efficiency. Intended or not, change is urgently needed.
Financial services firms need new approaches to innovation so as to better understand compliance responsibilities.
Civil liberty groups have said that the new data protection law, based on GDPR, would create a two-tier, racially discriminatory data protection regime.
Before the UK General Election debacle, the Conservative Party talked tough about reining in social media. Not so much today, when the talk is now of consultation.
The UK government has set out the prospect of a 'no deal' contingency customs regime, but the impact on the technology sector could be painful.
Europe's digital ministers have made the right noises and posed for the photo opp, Now they face the challenge of implementing a five year e-government vision.
Splunk’s security evangelist Matthias Maier posits some thoughts on what is important when it comes to managing GDPR in action.
Amber Rudd says she's doesn't need to understand encryption to come to a conclusion on it. Yes, you do, Home Secretary, yes you damn well do!