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Spanish DPA Publishes Report on Data Processing Activities in Relation to COVID-19

Hunton Privacy

Performing a task carried out in the public interest: Article 6(1)(e) of the GDPR may also provide a legal basis where data processing is necessary to perform a task carried out in the public interest or in the course of exercising official authority vested in the data controller.

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Belgium: Belgian DPA imposes a EUR600,000 fine, its highest fine ever, on Google Belgium for non-compliance with right to be forgotten

DLA Piper Privacy Matters

GDPR, which grants supervisory authorities the right to exercise its powers on the territory of their own member states. Such search results could, according to the Belgian DPA, be considered no longer necessary to exercise the right of freedom of expression and information conform article 17 (3), a) of the GDPR. 2 [link].

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Council of Europe Considers Amendments to Convention 108

Hunton Privacy

On June 28-30, 2011, the Council of Europe’s Bureau of the Consultative Committee of the Convention for the Protection of Individuals with regard to the Automatic Processing of Personal Data (known as the “T-PD-Bureau”) met in Strasbourg, France, to discuss, among other things, amending the Council of Europe’s Convention 108.

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RIM in the Cloud -- segmented

Positively RIM

Writing can be an exercise in futility without readers. In 2011, remote storage of digital information, part of the Cloud, grows in volume and frequency. The Cloud is more than evolutionary; it is qualitatively different from the media of 10 years ago. This is posted, below.

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hunting The Next Heartbleed

ForAllSecure

Listen to EP 10: Hunting The Next Heartbleed. So on December 31, 2011, at almost midnight, a developer with direct access to OpenSSL, Robin Seggelmann, committed the change that changed the heartbeat function. Kaksonen: I don't know, I'm not sure how the first fuzzer came to be, but I think that in fact it was an academic exercise.

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hunting The Next Heartbleed

ForAllSecure

Listen to EP 10: Hunting The Next Heartbleed. So on December 31, 2011, at almost midnight, a developer with direct access to OpenSSL, Robin Seggelmann, committed the change that changed the heartbeat function. Kaksonen: I don't know, I'm not sure how the first fuzzer came to be, but I think that in fact it was an academic exercise.

article thumbnail

The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hunting The Next Heartbleed

ForAllSecure

Listen to EP 10: Hunting The Next Heartbleed. So on December 31, 2011, at almost midnight, a developer with direct access to OpenSSL, Robin Seggelmann, committed the change that changed the heartbeat function. Kaksonen: I don't know, I'm not sure how the first fuzzer came to be, but I think that in fact it was an academic exercise.