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Data protection and cybersecurity in Portugal: challenges ahead through 2023 – The In-House Lawyer

Data protection and cybersecurity in Portugal: challenges ahead through 2023 – The In-House Lawyer
inhouselawyer.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from inhouselawyer.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

11 Months After Schrems II - How Are Organizations Addressing Risk? | Ankura Cybersecurity & Data Privacy

Digital Brief powered by Facebook: state aid debacle, DSA anti-disinformation, data flows

” – Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager Story of the week: The European Commission suffered another major defeat in its antitrust charges against Big Tech. The General Court of the European Union has dismissed the case against Amazon, which the EU executive accused of having received a special tax treatment from Luxembourg. The verdict is similar to another major antitrust case that concerned Apple and the Republic of Ireland. In both cases the court ruled that the Commission did not provide a sufficient legal basis for proving that the tax deal could be considered as state aid. The result of these legal proceedings raises doubts about whether the Commission’s antitrust investigations have teeth, and falls within a broader discussion on taxing web services. Listen to the podcast for more.

Global data transfer uncertainty undermines EU digital ambitions

Three years after the EU's flagship GDPR data protection regulation came into force, confusion over international data transfers following the landmark Schrems II ruling is hampering new technologies and jeopardising the bloc's digital agenda.

Portugal s COVID-19 cases pass 100,000

By Reuters Staff 2 Min Read LISBON (Reuters) - Portugal’s coronavirus cases passed 100,000 on Monday, with nearly 2,000 new infections in the past 24 hours, days after tough new measures to contain the disease came into force. FILE PHOTO: Trams are seen in traffic, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Lisbon, Portugal September 10, 2020. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante “Everyone’s tiredness is legitimate but it cannot legitimise failure,” the secretary of state for health, Antonio Sales, told a news conference. “We continue to depend on each other - and our success is the success of Portugal.” The nation of just over 10 million people initially won praise for its quick response to the pandemic.

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