The Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) on Personal Data Protection (PDP) bill is finally ready to table its report during the winter session of the Parliament. Mint looks at what is new in the JPC’s recommendations.
indeed, basically, any businesses wanting to do businesses wanting to do business with chinese consumers will have to conform to those rules, so it could really help let china play a bigger role in setting global standards for data regulation, especially because the us is nowhere close to passing nationwide privacy rules and the eu has had its data protection law from about three years ago but there is a key difference between that and these chinese rules, because of ageing it s not about protecting people s privacy and data, it will be controlled by the chinese communist party, which means it will be dictated by national security rather than private or business concerns. it also means the authorities will be able to come up with a framework to access the data of chinese citizens without any of us finding out finding out about it, and this is china trying to change behaviour overseas. let s turn to the environment now, and a legal battle over diesel cars. two years ago madrid,
Data regulations, risk-taking and up-skilling the goals for next decade: IBM CEO Arvind Krishna
February 17, 2021
‘Underlying data standards are crucial to encourage the ability to innovate on a global scale’ Data regulations, a culture of innovation and risk-taking, and up-skilling in relevant technologies can help India leverage the opportunity created for the IT industry post the Covid-19 crisis, according to Arvind Krishna, Chairman and CEO, IBM.
Talking to Debjani Ghosh, President, Nasscom, at the Nasscom Technology & Leadership Forum 2021, here on Wednesday, Krishna said: “A health crisis led to an economic crisis. But in crisis comes opportunity. Over the next one-three years, you will get an alignment of ecosystems. This is the moment where you can step that up by an order of magnitude.
The plea has claimed that the new privacy policy of WhatsApp allows full access into a user’s online activity without there being any supervision by the government.