By Neil Hodge2021-05-26T18:08:00+01:00
As the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) marks its third anniversary, lawyers and data protection experts continue to raise concerns that fine decisions are largely arbitrary, vary considerably from one EU country to the next, and lack transparency.
According to Privacy Affairs, a website that compiles GDPR enforcement data, there have been 661 fines under the law as of May 17 totaling approximately €293 million (U.S. $359 million). France’s €50 million penalty against Google in 2019 remains the highest. Spain has issued a third (222) of the total number of fines logged some three times that of Italy, in second place with 73.
How much your personal information sells for on the Dark Web
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Thousands Of British Firms May Be In Breach Of GDPR, Lawyers Warn
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You Are Worth $1,000 on the Dark Web, New Study by Privacy Affairs Finds
Increase in cybercrime activity sees identity fraud surge as prices drop
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LONDON, May 10, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The Dark Web sees personal information sold to this day. In 2020, organizations like NASA, McDonald s, Visa, MasterCard, Microsoft, and Google have experienced security breaches, leading to theft of credit card details, online banking logins, and social media credentials. Later, all this information can be found sold on the Dark Web.
PrivacyAffairs.com collected hundreds of examples of data being sold and reported the prices on their Dark Web Price Index.