Blogging and Social Networking Policy
These are sample rules and guidelines for communicating company-related information via social networking forums whether used in or outside the workplace.
These are sample rules and guidelines for communicating company-related information via social networking forums whether used in or outside the workplace.
This document is intended to provide non-profit staff with guidelines to eliminate any confusion concerning the use of social media.
This article deals with legislation requiring private or government entities to notify individuals of security breaches of information involving personally identifiable information.
This resource discusses cyber-risk, the threat that data breaches can hold and what Directors should do to protect their companies in the United States. This is resource is part of the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Handbook Series.
This report examines several case studies from the spheres of credit and lending, hiring and employment, higher education, and criminal justice to provide snapshots of opportunities and dangers, as well as ways that government policies can work to harness the power of big data and avoid discriminatory outcomes in the United States.
This 4th annual LegalSEC study provides key insights into the InfoSec programs and practices specific to legal firms.
This Opinion analyses the criteria set down in Article 7 of Directive 95/46/EC for making data processing legitimate. Focusing on the legitimate interests of the controller, it provides guidance on how to apply Article 7(f) under the current legal framework and makes recommendations for future improvements.
This article explains and demystifies cybersecurity for senior management and directors by identifying the steps global companies must take to address, mitigate, and respond to the risks associated with data security.
This article addresses latest privacy developments regarding data security.
This article shows how foreign parties entangled in litigation in the United States can receive discovery requests to produce documents located in their home country and that these litigants sometimes invoke their country’s blocking statute to resist production.