Avsnitt

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - US border forces are seizing Americans' phone data and storing it for 15 years

    - California fines Sephora $1.2 million for data privacy violation

    - Apple Pumps Up Ad Staff In Post Privacy-Policy Ad Business Push

    - Iranian authorities plan to use facial recognition to enforce new hijab law

    - Period and pregnancy tracking apps have bad privacy protections, report finds

    - FTC Sues Kochava for Selling Data that Tracks People at Reproductive Health Clinics, Places of Worship, and Other Sensitive Locations

    - Scanning students’ homes during remote testing is unconstitutional, judge says

    - Millions of Capital One Customers Are Eligible for Part of a $190 Million Settlement: Learn How to Claim Your Share

    - DuckDuckGo, Proton, Mozilla throw weight behind bill targeting Big Tech ‘surveillance’

    - Ravel emerges from stealth with privacy-first data tools based on scalable homomorphic encryption

    - DuckDuckGo's privacy-focused email service now open to all

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the free Data Collaboration Community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Heidi Saas takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-august-2022

    This month’s topics:

    Footprint wants to change how companies collect, store and share personal data US and UK launch research prize for ‘privacy enhancing technology’  Tim Hortons offers free coffee and donut to settle data privacy invasion claims  Lawsuit Against FTC Intensifies Location Data Privacy Battle  Report: 94 percent of consumers want control over the information they share with companies  U.S. communications regulator wants TikTok removed from app stores over spying concerns

    This month’s special guests:

    Jeff Jockisch (CEO, PrivacyPlan), Sameer Ahirrao (Founder, Ardent Privacy), and David Blaszkowsky (Helios Data)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

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  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Google targeted in fresh EU consumer groups' privacy complaints 

    - Further EU DPA orders stop of Google Analytics 

    - U.S. communications regulator wants TikTok removed from app stores over spying concerns 

    - Former Amazon Employee Found Guilty in 2019 Capital One Data Breach 

    - Google will delete location history data for abortion clinic visits 

    - Teslas Banned From China Communist Party Resort Town 

    - ‘Asleep at the wheel’: Canada police’s spyware admission raises alarm 

    - UK unveils Data Reform Bill, scrapping parts of GDPR and promising £1 billion in savings 

    - Daycare Apps Are Dangerously Insecure 

    - Supercookies Have Privacy Experts Sounding the Alarm

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the free Data Collaboration Community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Cat Coode takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-june-2022

    This month’s topics:

    The long-awaited U.S. data-privacy bill appears to be on track, again FTC Chair Khan plans key work on kids' data privacy online 'murena one’ protects users' privacy from google and surveillance Health data privacy concerns grow as abortion laws change nationwide Tim Hortons app collected vast amounts of sensitive data: privacy watchdogs DuckDuckGo caught giving Microsoft permission for trackers despite strong privacy reputation Canada’s new federal privacy Bill C-27

    This month’s special guests:

    David Kruger (Absio), Heidi Saas, and Jeff Jockisch (PrivacyPlan)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - The long-awaited U.S. data-privacy bill appears to be on track, again

    - FTC Chair Khan plans key work on kids' data privacy online

    - French data protection watchdog: Tweaking Google Analytics won’t make it legal

    - Tim Hortons app collected vast amounts of sensitive data: privacy watchdogs

    - UK Citizens need ‘education’ on NHS data sharing as Palantir eyes health service contracts

    - TikTok’s Latest Ad Targeting Provisions Reflect Increasing Revenue Pressure on the App

    - DuckDuckGo caught giving Microsoft permission for trackers despite strong privacy reputation

    - Canadian PM selects chief legal officer at House of Commons to be next privacy commissioner

    - 'murena one’ protects users' privacy from google and surveillance

    - Peekaboo! Here's a system to guarantee smart home privacy

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the free Data Collaboration Community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Erik Rind takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-may-2022

    This month’s topics:

    - Google Analytics to Stop Logging IP Addresses and Sunset Old Versions in Privacy Standards Overhaul - Scraping Data from LinkedIn Profiles is Legal, Appeals Court Rules - Major Study Finds Consumers Becoming Data 'Capitalists,' Willing to Trade Personal Info - B.C. Commissioner Mulling Over Privacy Code for Children - New Campaign in UK to Rename Cookies as 'Data Collectors' to Highlight Kids' Privacy Online - Your Personal Data is Exposed to Hackers — Alarming Report Reveals Mobile Apps are Not Protecting Your Info

    This month’s special guests:

    Priya Keshav (CEO & Founder, Meru Data), Sameer Ahirrao (CEO & Founder, Ardent Privacy), Jeff Jockisch (CEO, PrivacyPlan)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - EU court backs 'right to be forgotten' in Google case

    - Your Online Activity and Location Is Being Exposed 747 Times a Day

    - Roe draft raises concerns data could be used to identify abortion seekers, providers

    - Health data privacy concerns grow as abortion laws change nationwide

    - Do People Caught on Ring Cameras Have Privacy Rights?

    - Facebook and Instagram Turn Off AR Filters In Texas and Illinois

    - India’s restrictive VPN law should be a warning to us all

    - Indian customer sends notice to Ola Electric for making telemetry data public

    - FTC to set its sights on ed tech companies

    - New DuckDuckGo privacy ad shows how it makes sure internet trackers are DuckDuckGone

    - Dig emerges from stealth to help organizations secure public cloud data

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the free Data Collaboration Community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - German Amazon Workers Strike Over Pay, Data Protection

    - Google Now Takes Requests To Remove Personal Info From Search Results

    - Meta Can Still Be Sued By Groups Under Data Rules, Says EU Court

    - Canada's Privacy Watchdogs Call For Laws Limiting Police Use Of Facial Recognition

    - Data Privacy Bill Wins Final Approval In Connecticut House

    - Maltese Academic Appointed Lead Expert By Council Of Europe

    - Austrian DPA Rejects “risk Based Approach” For Data Transfers To Third Countries

    - Polish DPA Rules About The Right To Access The Personal Data Contained In Trackers

    - Secret Surveillance Court Orders Drop More Than 50 Percent Since 2019

    - EU Must Act To End Spyware Abuse After Prominent Catalans Targeted With Pegasus

    - Israeli Tech Firm Says It Can Delete Your Digital Footprint

    - Data Privacy Platform Kahoona Closes $4.5m. In Financing

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Heidi Saas takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-april-2022

    This month’s topics:

    - Google Analytics to Stop Logging IP Addresses and Sunset Old Versions in Privacy Standards Overhaul - Scraping Data from LinkedIn Profiles is Legal, Appeals Court Rules - Major Study Finds Consumers Becoming Data 'Capitalists,' Willing to Trade Personal Info - B.C. Commissioner Mulling Over Privacy Code for Children - New Campaign in UK to Rename Cookies as 'Data Collectors' to Highlight Kids' Privacy Online - Your Personal Data is Exposed to Hackers — Alarming Report Reveals Mobile Apps are Not Protecting Your Info

    This month’s special guests:

    Chris McLellan (Data Collaboration Alliance), Cat Coode (Binary Tattoo), and Jeff Jockisch (PrivacyPlan)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    – Scraping Data From LinkedIn Profiles Is Legal, Appeals Court Rules

    – Top EU Officials Hope Data-Flows Deal Will Be Completed This Year

    – Apple’s Cook Says Circumventing App Store Would Harm User Privacy

    – Personal Data Breaches Are Falling – Except in Russia

    – The U.S. Government’s Google Maps Probe Could Send Ripples Through the Car Industry

    – Google Gets Data Each Time an Android Phone Sends, Receives a Call

    – Criminal Identification Bill in India Raises Fears of Shadowing

    – The Facebook Whistleblower Takes On the Metaverse

    – Australia Warns Voters to ‘Think Twice’ Before Giving Details to Political Parties Offering to Register Their Postal Vote Ahead of Election

    – UK Government Agrees Bulk Surveillance Powers Fail to Protect Journalists and Sources

    – Record Fine for Dutch Tax Office Over Personal Data List

    – A Professor Found His Exam Questions Posted Online. He’s Suing the Students Responsible for Copyright Infringement

    – Swiss Platform Rakes In $15 Million to Enable Secure Data Clean Rooms

    – Avast Acquires Securekey Technologies As It Bulks Up Its Digital Identity Business

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Over Half of Data Security Incidents Caused by Insiders

    - New campaign in UK to rename cookies as 'data collectors' to highlight kids' privacy online

    - Some Russian oligarchs are using U.K. data privacy law to sue

    - Ukraine has started using Clearview AI’s facial recognition during war

    - Ukraine war: Mobile networks being weaponised to target troops on both sides of conflict

    - Post Office Cops Used Social Media Surveillance Program Illegally

    - Amazon's Alexa Collects More of Your Data Than Any Other Smart Assistant

    - CCPA having a definite impact as Californians assert digital privacy rights

    - Swiss privacy technology tackles rampant online intrusion

    - Google Workspace's new security feature scrambles your data before it's uploaded

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Facebook's parent company, Meta, has been fined €17 million (~$18.6 million) by the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) over a string of historical data breaches

    - Ireland Watchdog Sued for Years of 'Inaction' Over Complaints Regarding Google's Largest Data Breach Ever

    - California Begins Slow Launch of Nation’s First Online Privacy Protection Agency

    - Google Analytics To Stop Logging IP Addresses And Sunset Old Versions In Privacy Standards Overhaul

    - TikTok Can Circumvent Apple and Google Privacy Protections and Access Full User Data, 2 Studies Say

    - UK plans to abolish DPOs – and much more

    -  A US surveillance program tracks nearly 200,000 immigrants. What happens to their data?

    - Health chiefs scrap controversial plan which would have seen a SINGLE glass of wine in pregnancy noted on a baby's medical file

    - Your personal data is exposed to hackers — alarming report reveals mobile apps are not protecting your info

    - Major Study Finds Consumers Becoming Data 'Capitalists,' Willing To Trade Personal Info

    - Report: Census Bureau should set timeframes for protecting respondents’ data privacy

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Debbie Reynolds takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-march-2022

    This month’s topics:

    Google, Meta push back against changes to Australian privacy laws Ontario pledges to become first province to protect workers from digital spying by bosses DHS privacy chief aims to promote ‘privacy enhancing technologies’ Google to change privacy policy on Android under UK’s competition oversight Bloomberg loses appeal in landmark UK privacy case Irish regulator could halt Facebook, Instagram EU-US data flows in May

    This month’s special guests:

    David Kruger (Absio Corporation), Sameer Ahirrao (Ardent Privacy), and Jeff Jockisch(PrivacyPlan)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Committee Pushes Ahead with Data Privacy Bill Following Biden State of the Union Remarks

    - Privacy activists launch new offensive against non-compliant cookie banners

    - German court rules: CEO to be held personally liable for data privacy violations

    - EU, US close to replacing defunct Privacy Shield II

    - Chelsea Manning and Data Privacy take centre stage at Geneva human rights film festival

    - More privacy breaches in handling of military sexual misconduct settlement deal

    - Kurbo and WW International Agree to $1.5 Million Civil Penalty for Alleged Violations of Children’s Privacy Laws

    - Activists pushed the IRS to drop facial recognition. They won, but they're not done yet

    - Meta’s Graham Mudd To Depart Meta And Found His Own Privacy Startup

    - Cisco publishes 2022 Data Privacy Benchmark Study

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Irish regulator could halt Facebook, Instagram EU-US data flows in May

    - ‘Can’t ask people to agree to a data breach’: Belgian regulator rules cookie-consent pop ups are illegal

    - Data protection becomes a fundamental right in Brazil

    - Ontario pledges to become first province to protect workers from digital spying by bosses

    - Over 100 million Samsung smartphones shipped with a fatal security flaw

    - iOS 15.4 beta 4 adds anti-stalking alerts to AirTag and other Find My accessories

    - Google, Meta push back against changes to Australian privacy laws

    - Secureframe locks in $56M

    - anecdotes, a compliance operating system platform, secures $25M Series A

    - Trust Stamp Launches Privacy-First Identity Orchestration Platform

    - Data Privacy Startup ID Ward Raises €1.1 Million To Launch Its Decentralised Advertising Technology

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Debbie Reynolds takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-for-february-2022

    This month’s topics:

    Startpage Search Engine launches Privacy Protection extension  Does Google Analytics Violate the GDPR?  IRS will require taxpayers to sign up with ID.me to access their online accounts  Lawmakers Plan Legislation to ‘Ban Surveillance Advertising’  Employee surveillance is exploding with remote work—and could be the new norm  Judge rejects Facebook's request to dismiss FTC antitrust complaint

    This month’s special guests:

    Kelly Finnerty (Startpage), Cat Coode (Binary Tattoo), and Priya Keshav (Meru Data)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this episode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Meta threatens to pull Instagram and Facebook in Europe over privacy laws

    - IRS ends use of facial recognition after widespread privacy concerns

    - Google and OpenMined differential privacy tool for Python developers processing data

    - Massachusetts lawmakers advance state-level data privacy law

    - FBI warns of LockBit 2.0 ransomware

    - EU digital sovereignty project Gaia-X hands out ID tech contracts

    - NEWS Grindr Is No Longer Available in China Due to Data Privacy Concerns

    - Europe’s user consent system incompatible with EU privacy rules

    - IBM’s new ML toolkit to help companies comply with GDPR

    - Lyve Labs Israel to help start-ups with data security

    - Privacy-focused applications platform Aleo raises $200M

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • In this month's Data Drop Panel, our host Debbie Reynolds takes a deeper dive into some of the most important, concerning, and downright fascinating data privacy and data protection items covered by the Data Drop News podcast in recent weeks.

    Stream the discussion with full captions or visit our episode post to get the full transcript and all the links: https://www.datacollaboration.org/post/the-data-drop-panel-january-2021

    This month’s topics:

    WhatsApp rewrites its Europe privacy policy after a record €225 million GDPR fine Australian Online Privacy Bill to make social media age verification mandatory for tech giants, Reddit, Zoom, gaming platforms Digitization of courts brings privacy concerns. But India lacks right to be forgotten Lawmakers push for federal data privacy law after report revealed Amazon is gutting state legislation Hacking fingerprints is affordable and simple, says Kraken Security Clearview AI told it broke Australia’s privacy law, ordered to delete data

    This month’s special guests:

    Heidi Saas (Data Privacy and Technology Attorney) Jeff Jockisch (CEO, PrivacyPlan) Sameer Ahirrao (Founder & CEO, Ardent Privacy)

    The Data Drop News is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit working to advance data ownership through pilot projects in sustainability, healthcare, education, and social inclusion, as well as free training in the data collaboration methodology. Visit datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this epsiode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - Facebook reveals how it really collects and uses your data with new Privacy Center

    - Amazon Sued Over Biometric Covid Checks

    - E.U. Parliament Told to Fix Illegal Export of COVID-19 Data to U.S.

    - Companies propose scanning content pre-encryption to fight CSAM

    - Facebook is shutting down its facial recognition software

    - Survey: Most Americans Mistrust Big Tech and Want Regulation

    - Idea of national patient IDs revives privacy fight

    - We hate it: This implantable microchip stores your COVID vaccine status

    - Signal’s CEO steps down as questions about its privacy-first image loom large

    - DeepIntent Receives Patent for Technology that Enables Marketers to Reach Precise Patient Populations in a HIPAA-Compliant, Privacy-Safe Manner

    - AMD's new privacy app goes the extra mile to keep your screen safe

    - Proofpoint Buys AI-Powered Data Protection Startup Dathena

    - Ethereum Privacy Startup Aztec Raises $17M in Paradigm-Led Series A

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org

  • Visit our blog to get links to all the stories featured in this epsiode: https://www.datacollaboration.org/blog/categories/datadrop

    In this episode:

    - UK urged to review lobbying rules after former privacy chief joins law firm

    - Irish Regulator Submits Draft Decision on Instagram’s Use of Children’s Data

    - NIST Publishes Draft Security Criteria for Consumer Software

    - ‘Family Safety’ App Selling Precise Location Data of Millions of Users

    - Thousands of AT&T Subscribers Infected With Data-Pilfering Malware, Researchers Say

    - UK Supreme Court Landmark Decision Limits Data Privacy Class Actions in the UK

    - Apple sues NSO Group to curb the abuse of state-sponsored spyware

    - Workers Are Using ‘Mouse Movers’ So They Can Use the Bathroom in Peace

    - Identity verification startup Incode raises $220M

    - iOS 15.2 lets you scan for Find My devices that may be tracking you

    - You.com search challenges Google with a new look and private mode

    - IoT anomaly detection startup Shield-IoT lands $7.4M

    - Piiano Raises USD 9M Seed Round

    The Data Drop is a production of the Data Collaboration Alliance, a nonprofit advancing meaningful data ownership and inclusive innovation through open research and free skills training. To learn more about our free partnerships, the Node Zero community, and our support of the Zero-Copy Integration standard, please visit: datacollaboration.org