![]() ![]() There have also, in recent months, been decisions by data protection agencies finding certain uses of tools like Google Analytics to be incompatible with the bloc’s privacy laws.ĮU lawmakers use that phrasing to talk about the region gaining autonomy over digital infrastructure - much of which is supplied by U.S. And the European Data Protection Board (EDPB), which is steering the action, is due to publish a ‘state of play’ report before the end of 2022 - matching Google’s timeline for rolling out (some of) the new controls. ![]() cloud services.Įarlier this year, a number of data protection agencies kicked off a coordinated enforcement action focused on public sector bodies’ use of cloud services - with the goal of investigating whether adequate data protection measures are applied, including when data is exported out of the bloc. The move looks intended to respond to heightened legal risk around exports of personal data - following a landmark EU legal ruling in July 2020 - which risks putting a dampener on regional use of U.S. It says these extra control will enable organizations - both public and private sector - to “control, limit, and monitor transfers of data to and from the EU starting at the end of 2022,” announcing the incoming capabilities in a blog post. Google has announced a package of additional controls for users of its productivity suite, Google Workspace ( neé G Suite), in Europe - which it’s rolling out by the end of this year and next.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |