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It’s a hot spring for state privacy legislation. Privacy bills are pending in roughly 20 states, and while Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) exemptions may act as a cool breeze in some, issues remain:
Some states’ legislation has no GLBA exemption.
Some states’ legislation only contains a data-level exemption, meaning non-GLBA data would be subject to the states’ privacy requirements.
Even those states’ legislation that contains such an entity-level exemption will not insulate insurers from contractual obligations imposed by third parties who are subject to the legislation.
Virginia is the first state to follow California’s lead in adopting comprehensive privacy legislation, but its Consumer Data Protection Act has an entity-level GLBA exemption preventing any direct application to insurers. California, at work again, amended its Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) by adopting the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA),
Effective December 27, 2019
Welcome to WineMag.com. The Wine Enthusiast, Inc. (“we”, “us” or the “Company”) is committed to protecting your privacy! This Privacy Policy describes how we collect, use, share and protect your personal information, including information gathered through your use of WineMag.com, and affiliated websites wineenthusiast.com, wineexpress.com and thirstynest.com (“Websites”) that link to this Privacy Policy and any services we may provide (collectively, “Services”). This Privacy Policy covers data, including personal information, collected through our Services and all other means whether online or offline. By using our Services, you accept the practices described in this Privacy Policy. If you do not agree to this Privacy Policy, please do not use our Services.
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Tim Gouw | unsplash
If something is a good thing, we want more of it. We push it to the max and then some.
Outbound marketing is a good thing. No, it s a great thing. It s so great, we do a whole lot of it. Marketers sent an average of 306 billion emails a day in 2020, according to Statista. Outbound marketing expands awareness, fills funnels and builds databases of people who might buy our products someday.
A great thing pushed too far, however, becomes a bad thing.
We pushed email marketing so far that over 20 states have introduced or passed statutes and bills designed to exert more control over unsolicited digital interactions, privacy, spam and wrongful disclosure. The goal is to put the individual in control of what data they share, how that data is used, and what type and from whom they receive digital communications. California s Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) and Virginia s HB 2307 Consumer Data Protection Act are representative of
Contact tracing has been more than a buzzword during the coronavirus pandemic. In some cases, it has been an issue of life and death. Tracking who an infected person has been in contact with is an important tool to minimise disease spread, and technology from the physical security industry claimed a role in contact tracing early on – and continues to provide benefits as companies seek to reopen. We asked this week’s Expert Panel Roundtable: How can the security industry enhance contact tracing?
The return to the workplace is a focal point for many in the built environment but one of the most important elements is easy to overlook. Guest services will be vital in the return to the workplace. Front-of-house teams will be responsible for welcoming building users back and reassuring them as they negotiate shared spaces in the post-Covid era.
EU attempts to rein in AI with expansive new regulatory proposal
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The European Commission announced sweeping new proposals aimed at heavily regulating artificial intelligence within the EU’s 27-nation bloc. As the first comprehensive legal framework specifically focused on regulating AI, the proposals would cast a wide regulatory net, with specific attention paid to “high-risk” AI applications that could threaten human safety or fundamental rights. The proposed framework also calls for outright bans on especially concerning AI applications, including social scoring systems like those used in China, AI systems that use “subliminal techniques” to manipulate people’s behavior or cause physical or physiological harm, and real-time remote use of facial recognition or other biometric identification systems in public spaces.