GDPR isn't enforceable in jurisdictions that don't have corresponding local laws. Take Privacy Shield in the US - this is an agreement betwee the US government and the EU stating the FTC and Chamber of Commerce will act as the supervisory authorities for GDPR enforcement against companies registered in the US.
You're right, the fundamental functioning of Google, Facebook, et al. won't change. They will update their privacy policies, and give users access to view, update or delete all of their information more easily. The uses of that information will be disclosed and there will be consequences for misuse or failure to protect that information. GDPR is setting expectations for the protection of data previously where it was an anything-goes or minimum-effort policy.
I can see how those opposed to government regulation would hate GDPR, but no other industry standard on data privacy has gained traction and data breaches are happening more frequently at the expense of real people.
Could the 5% drop be accounted for considering the numbers are for April 14th 2017 and not after the filing deadline of April 18th 2017? Seems like many people would file and/or postmark their returns Monday or Tuesday.
Force majeure doesn't apply in this circumstance because it requires an external force or event that is unforeseeable. In this case, United didn't plan correctly for the transport of its 4 employees, something well within its capability to predict.
"Since the indictment, Imaging Universe has charged Schapiro $8,200 to produce nine sets of discovery documents to his defense team. The motion identifies those records to include a dozen CDs containing approximately 1,140 PDF files, many with multiple pages."
It appears that the defense was required to be on-premise to review the documents and was charged a fee by Imaging Universe to take copies with them. Requesting copies of all records shouldn't be necessary to obfuscate the defense's real documentation needs.
SentinalOne probably approached VirusTotal with specific requirements about how they wanted to contribute back, and VirusTotal said 'you can contribute the same way everyone else does.' The rest is marketing BS.
Currently, yes. The article is positing that once Apple has the infrastructure in place for end-to-end transactions, removing the VISA/MC puzzle piece will be easy. Ultimately, you'd put money into an Apple account and spent it on your iPhone.
If this is true, then Privacy.com doesn't resolve this obligation. The temporary card number won't be chargeable by the merchant, but you'd still be on the hook for the renewed (and unpaid) service.
It's actually fairly difficult. There are so many different possible combinations of incoming data quality, quantity, system and disk configuration, performance and internal ES settings. Only an administrator would be familiar enough with the environment to monitor and tweak the configuration to make it the most performant.
There are a few hosted elasticsearch services available (Elastic Cloud, AWS ES, Qbox, etc) which would likely be a better option for the team that needed a hands-off elasticsearch cluster.
Taller buildings with complex and highly trafficked elevators still do this only using electronics. Employees swipe their badges at a podium which reads what floor they work on and indicates which elevator they should proceed to. The system can intelligently schedule the elevator for that person to use knowing where their destination is.
You're right, the fundamental functioning of Google, Facebook, et al. won't change. They will update their privacy policies, and give users access to view, update or delete all of their information more easily. The uses of that information will be disclosed and there will be consequences for misuse or failure to protect that information. GDPR is setting expectations for the protection of data previously where it was an anything-goes or minimum-effort policy.
I can see how those opposed to government regulation would hate GDPR, but no other industry standard on data privacy has gained traction and data breaches are happening more frequently at the expense of real people.