Because most companies subject to GDPR will need to comply with Article 30, this Solutions Brief will cover the general requirements, processes to help meet the requirements, and how to produce Article 30 compliance reports.
This solution brief will share the findings from those collaborations. Specifically, this brief will explain the similarities and differences between a PIA and DPIA, and outline best practices for conducting a DPIA.
This guide distills the 200+ page GDPR into five discrete phases to help a business develop a plan for compliance. The guide is designed for professionals across a wide range of functions who will be impacted by the GDPR.
Data stored in the cloud may include intellectual property, confidential business information, usernames, passwords, or highly regulated information such as healthcare, personal, or financial details. The insider threat already lives in and is taking advantage of the cloud, which could lead to major data breach incidents, tarnished corporate reputation, and severe financial penalties. Only true visibility and a preventive approach can unmask the threat and mitigate the risk - download the white paper to learn more.
When it comes to endpoint security, the playing field has changed. Threats are more dangerous and prevalent than ever before. Global security standards are more rigid, and the penalties for non-compliance more severe. Yesterday’s security strategy isn’t going to protect you from tomorrow’s attacks. Download this white paper for a deep dive into the four essential strategies for endpoint security. Authored by Richard Henderson, Global Security Strategist at Absolute, you’ll learn how to:
Enforcement of the GDPR is looming. Every organization around the world that processes or controls any data pertaining to EU citizens must be in compliance with the new regulation in order to avoid facing steep penalties.
The new European Union (EU) General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) requires that organisations undertake significant operational reform to meet increased obligations of handling personal data. Appropriate record keeping is critical as the GDPR requires organisations to demonstrate compliance and accountability. OneTrust privacy management software helps organisations meet these requirements by automating privacy impact assessments and data mapping, identifying privacy risks, and enforcing risk management activities in an integrated platform. This guide covers how to use the OneTrust Privacy Management Software to meet the requirements of the GDPR.
OneTrust® is a global leader and the fastest growing privacy management software platform used by more than 1,500 organizations to comply with data privacy regulations across sectors and jurisdictions, including the EU GDPR. Our comprehensive and integrated platform includes readiness assessments, privacy impact assessments (PIA/DPIA) and data mapping automation, website scanning and cookie compliance, subject rights and consent management, incident reporting, and vendor risk management.