Viewed 1585 times | Published on 2018-05-21 09:05:23

GDPR, the new frontier of data privacy- courtesy of the European Union, but like GSM it is actually for everybody.
This short book is a discussion from a cultural and organizational perspective about the current and potential business impacts of GDPR, and it is a follow up to "The business side of BYOD" (ISBN 978-1494844264), published on 2014-01-30 (on enabling smartphones, tablets, computers, and any other device that goes under the label "Internet of Things" - IoT).
Low-cost printed edition available on Amazon (available worldwide, please check with your local Amazon website for local shipping)
It has been prepared as a "case study" for future workshops.
Focus: knowledge- and information-management beyond your corporate boundaries
(book published on 2018-06-03, page updated on 2020-08-14)
CONTENTS
DISCLAIMER AND TARGET AUDIENCE
CAVEAT
1 TODAY ... 1
1.2.1. Fines ... 8
1.2.2. Consent ... 10
1.2.3. Design ... 14
1.3. Five examples ... 18
1.3.1. Outline ... 19
1.3.2. Level 1 Segregation of Duties ... 19
1.3.3. Level 2 Support to decision making ... 20
1.3.4. Level 3 Data mining and exploration ... 21
1.3.5. Level 4 Externalizing sensitive data ... 22
1.3.6. Level 5 Privacy by design and by default ... 23
1.3.7. Patterns of evolution ... 24
1.4. Location, location, location: cloud and outsourcing ... 25
1.5. Your infrastructure is talking: outsourcing, cloud, and beyond ... 27
1.6. Stay focused: the sum of all fears ... 34
2 TOMORROW ... 37
2.1. Coping with the future ... 38
2.2. Governance of your knowledge supply chain ... 46
2.3. Internet of things: some privacy clouds ... 50
2.4. A bag of (cultural, organizational, technological) tricks ... 52
2.4.1. Do you know your revenue streams? Restructure! ... 53
2.4.2. Converting personal data into revenue and its side-effects ... 54
2.4.3. Organizational development ... 55
2.4.4. Joint data product delivery ... 58
3 CONCLUSIONS? ... 59
A LIST OF TABLES ... 61
B REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED READINGS ... 63
Online content in this site on #privacy and #GDPR (items prior to 2014 are mostly offline):