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103GBF – Everything that Rocks the River City – Evansville s Rock Radio

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California AG Proposes Fourth Set of Modifications to CCPA Regulations | WilmerHale

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: On December 10, 2020, less than two months after proposing previous modifications, the California Attorney General’s Office proposed a fourth set of modifications to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) regulations based on comments received from the previous modifications proposed. The comment period for this new set of modifications ends on December 28, 2020. The fourth set of modifications offer two changes to the CCPA’s “right to opt-out of sale” rule. First, they clarify that only businesses that “sell” personal information (as opposed to businesses that “collect” personal information) must provide consumers with an offline notice that informs them how they can submit a request to opt-out from the business. Second, it adds a “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” button that businesses may use in addition to having the link on the bottom of their website. If businesses choose to use the butto

2021 will be a cybercrime bruiser

Dec 15, 2020 Predicting the future is risky. As is often quipped, predicting the past is hard enough! Certainly, nobody could predict that 2020 would be a year like none other in modern history. The pandemic caused a tremendous realignment of priorities and waves of uncertainty. It’s ironic, then, that at least one area behaved almost exactly as many predicted it would, and even exceeded expectations. 2020 was a bonanza year for cybercrime, which exploited uncertainty, fear and dramatic changes in company operations. This built off 2019, a year in which security vendor FireEye noted nearly half of identified malware families were brand new. If 2019 was a surge, 2020 provided the bang for cybercrime.

Spotify notifies customers of breach, files under CCPA

People walk by the New York Stock Exchange on the morning that the music streaming service Spotify begins trading shares at the NYSE on April 3, 2018 in New York City. The streaming service notified an unspecified number of its customers of a data breach, responding by resetting passwords on the accounts that were attacked. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images) Streaming service Spotify has notified an unspecified number of its customers of a data breach, responding by resetting passwords on the accounts that were attacked. In a breach notification letter dated Dec. 9 to its customers and filed with the California attorney general, Spotify said the company discovered the vulnerability on its system on November 12, but that the issue existed on its systems since April 9 of this year.

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