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The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Keyword with padlock-- symbol of data security

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

COMECE organised the first EU-Church expert meeting on General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). IN dialogue with representatives of the EU, participants of this event identified and discussed some of the the main challenges in this field.

 

Brussels, 21 May 2019

Policymakers around the world are grappling with how to manage the effects of current and future digital technologies on society, particularly in the areas of privacy, free expression, and other fundamental freedoms. The experience to date with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has generated questions on how greater transparency and notice to internet users can effectively protect privacy. Meanwhile, U.S. regulators and Congress are actively considering similar steps to strengthen data protection and penalize social media companies for transgressing consumers’ rights. Hosted by the Foreign Policy program at Brookings, the sixth annual Justice Stephen Breyer Lecture on International Law examined these issues at the intersection of comparative law, technology, ethics, and human rights. Jeroen van den Hoven, professor of ethics and technology at Delft University of Technology in The Netherlands, gave keynote remarks. He was then be joined for a panel discussion by Cameron Kerry, former general counsel at the U.S. Department of Commerce and distinguished fellow at Brookings, and Bilyana Petkova, assistant professor of international and European law at Maastricht University and fellow-in-residence at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. Nicol Turner Lee, fellow in the Brookings Center for Technology Innovation, moderated the discussion. After the program, the speakers answered questions from the audience.

 

Photo Credit: Paul Morigi

GDPR Invoked: Bus Éireann (Roxboro, Limerick) Dual-Door Wright Gemini 3 Volvo B5TL VWD417 (182-L-7) operating on Route 304 at St. Nessan's Road, Dooradoyle, Limerick on a very frosty Saturday evening, 16th November, 2019.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Is BitLocker good to protect data for any organization? Well, Microsoft BitLocker is a full-volume encryption feature that encrypts the entire drive to ensure protection from unauthorized access, data theft, or exposure from lost or stolen. Its automated features help mitigate data access by enhancing file and system protection.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

pluralistic.net/2025/12/01/erin-go-blagged/#big-tech-omerta

 

A 1950s image of a cop with a patrol car lecturing a boy on a bicycle. Both the cop's head and the boy's head have been replaced with the head of Mark Zuckerberg's metaverse avatar. The ground has been replaced with a 'code waterfall' effect as seen in the Wachowskis' 'Matrix' movies. The background has been replaced with the glaring red eye of HAL 9000 from Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey.' The cop's uniform and car have been decorated to resemble the livery of the Irish Garda (police) and a Garda logo has been placed over the right breast of the cop's uniform shirt.

  

Image:

Cryteria (modified)

commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg

 

CC BY 3.0

creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en

Tipo: Comboio de Transporte de Mercadorias 75430 [Vilar Formoso - Pampilhosa]

Local: Estação da Pampilhosa [Linha do Norte, PK 231 • Linha da Beira Alta, PK 50]

Data e hora: 3 de Setembro de 2008 [17h08]

Material: Locomotiva 2611 + 21 vagões Transfesa Hbis

 

* esta fotografia foi publicada num artigo do portal RailFreight.com.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Smart Contract Analytics (SCA) Platform is based on AI / ML and specifically uses NLP and pattern recognition to process the contracts and extract the metadata. The platform is hosted on the AWS cloud that takes advantage of all security features that AWS provides along with the high availability and scalability features with GDPR compliances.

  

Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning capabilities:

  

The SCA Platform uses Deep learning Neural Network models like Bi-LSTM, CNN, and other models that leverage state-of-the-art Natural Language Processing (NLP) based modeling techniques such as Word2Vec and Bi-directional Encoder Representations with Transformers to develop a semantic understanding of the document contents and further extract relevant entities and clauses.

  

Product features:

  

1) NLP and deep learning techniques for extracting metadata

 

2) Export the extracted data to Excel or client desired format and push the extracted data into any CLM or downstream system

 

3) Support of foreign languages (currently supported languages include Spanish and German)

 

and rest of the languages are in the planned roadmap

 

4) Generate dynamic ML models based on the contract type

 

5) The Platform has adaptors to various data sources to obtain legacy documents (FTP, Google Drive, SharePoint, dropbox, box, S3, and others, etc.)

 

6) The Platform can segregate the contracts based on the type of the contract (i.e. MSA, NDA, and SOW, etc.)

 

7) Ability to rename the contracts – standardize naming conventions if needed.

 

8) Document OCR capability with the ability to convert images, unsearchable pdf and scanned documents into text.

 

9) Metadata configurable

 

10) Integrated Quality Control tools for verification and validation of extracted clauses/metadata.

 

11) Compare two executed contracts of the same type to show the differences

 

12) Compare executed contracts with the standard template at a section/clause level

13) Notifications / Alerts engine that sends out notifications to email/text messages ( for example contracts expiring in 30/60/90 days, contracts that have an “Auto Renew” clause or Contracts that are not countersigned, and several others based on the configured attributes.

 

14) Show all the contracts executed with a specific Vendor ( or by account) in a hierarchical manner

 

15) Hierarchical mapping of the contracts assuming enough linkage attributes are available within the executed contracts or tracked in a CLM system

 

16) Open API that can be integrated with any 3rd party systems

  

Analytics capabilities:

  

The Smart Contract Analytics Platform comes with the following out of the box analytics capabilities based on the metadata extracted from the documents:

 

• number of contracts that are coming up for renewal by period (30 /60/90 days)

 

• Number of Contracts with Net payment terms as 30 days, 45 days, and 90 days, etc.

 

• Number of SOW’s / MSAs / Other Types of Contracts by the supplier

 

• Show contracts by the specified metadata (ex: “tell me how many contracts have clause ‘Indemnity’.”)

 

• number of contracts that have the “Auto Renew” option

 

• number of contracts that have an Insurance Liability clause with a specified $ amount

 

• Several others based on metadata and meta fields.

 

The Bishop of Clogher, Right Revd John McDowell, has spoken of the ‘intolerable burden’ that regulations place on voluntary organisations in his Presidential Address to Clogher Diocesan Synod on 26th September.

 

Speaking at the Synod held in the Cathedral Hall, Enniskillen, Bishop McDowell also referred to the 150th anniversary of Disestablishment and the continuing uncertainty over Brexit. He has already sent an open letter to the Prime Minister.

 

The Bishop told the Synod: “Last year at this Synod I had some cautious and cautionary words to say about Brexit. But whatever uncertainty existed then has now been deepened by all sorts of developments since and, whatever happens, has brought the whole of the UK to a ‘constitutional moment.’

 

“Insofar as I have had anything to say about these matters I hope I have done so from a Kingdom perspective where the love of one’s neighbour is the guiding standard. I hope you will remember in your private and public devotions the complex and far reaching events which will unfold in the weeks to come. Pray that what beginnings of peace and integration which we have in this part of the world are sufficient to help us understand one another in a world where barriers are going up rather than coming down.”

 

Speaking about Safeguarding and GDPR, Bishop McDowell referred to the series of training events which have been held throughout the Diocese.

 

He said: “I think now is a good time to say something about what might become the intolerable burden which regulatory regimes are demanding of voluntary organisations. The Church is a significant provider of services especially to young people but also to adults of all ages.

 

“Although there are times when we could have been done better and other occasions when the Church actually inflicted grave harm, for the most part those services have enriched the lives of individuals and communities for hundreds of years. And they are organised and delivered on an almost entirely voluntary basis. And that culture of voluntarism is frankly being undermined by an obsession with regulation that isn’t particularly nuanced or, at times, even proportionate.

 

“As a church we are probably in greater danger of atrophying and withering through the excessive demands on our volunteers on select vestries, diocesan boards and council, youth organisations and other fellowship groups, than we are from doctrinal or other spiritual matters. And I know this is the experience of many other Christian traditions and indeed non–religious groups. And it needs to be taken into account,” said Bishop McDowell.

 

The Bishop also referred to the needs of parishes and recommended that parishes should work collaboratively.

 

He explained: “It has also become very clear to me as I go around the Diocese and speak to those involved very close to the ground that the traditional model of self–sufficient and stand–alone parishes or groups of parishes probably cannot be sustained for very much longer.

 

“The breadth of skills necessary to maintain and run a parish no longer exists in a single person no matter how gifted they are and it is clear that much greater collaboration will be needed between parishes and within groups of parishes than has been the case up to now. For instance a group of three parishes needs a total of 18 ‘officers’ if you take into account churchwardens, glebewardens, treasurers and secretaries. A union of three parishes would require just 10 (if there are still church buildings in each of the parishes).

 

“It is also worth thinking about just how much closer a spirit of cooperation is to the spirit of the Gospel than a spirit of competition or of utter independence. Even where a full union of parishes isn’t or can’t be achieved there is no reason why informal collaboration shouldn’t be explored,” he said, adding that parishes should explore external funding opportunities.

 

Bishop McDowell also commented on the 150th anniversary of Distablishment and said that the Irish Church Act passed in July and which came into effect on 31 December 1869 completed the nineteenth century parliamentary reform of the Church of Ireland. Now, in 1869, the Church of Ireland, united to the Church of England since the Act of Union in 1801 was to be separated, disendowed and disestablished. Fiercely opposed at the time, the Church’s Disestablishment was its liberation.

 

“Whatever might otherwise have happened, Disestablishment enables the Church of Ireland, like the other churches to continue as one church in two civil jurisdictions. This has allowed it (perhaps required it) to speak to either civil jurisdiction conscious of its place in the other and to speak to both from a grounding in the Kingdom of God.

 

“Disestablishment therefore set the Church of Ireland free to be what it is, a minority tradition in the Body of Christ, a church on the same standing as others in the family of God, one branch of the True Vine. Ours is a church, that, tracing its history through the often–complex history of these islands cherishes its identity as Catholic and Reformed. It is part of a world–wide communion of churches and of developing ecumenical institutions.

 

“Without being backward looking or inward looking we have much to thank the Disestablishment generation for, particularly in the financial and administrative arrangements which they devised in very short order and which have survived more or less intact right down to today.

 

“But there are one or two matters about Establishment and Disestablishment of the Church which we would do well to acknowledge and learn from today.

 

“First, that Establishment and all the Acts of Parliament that supported it over the years were not only intended to give the Church of Ireland a privileged position far beyond its numbers. At best only 12% of the population of Ireland ever belonged even in the most nominal sense to the Church of Ireland.

 

“And secondly to note that the 'Establishment mentality' of the Church of Ireland didn’t cease with the passing of the Irish Church Act. Certainly over time we learnt not to depend on Big House generosity for our well-being. Certainly we learned to stand on our own two feet financially and indeed spiritually (the Church of Ireland has always been the most clearly 'Protestant' of the Anglican churches of these islands). As a result of this rather strong self–preservation instinct both North and South it’s not that we’ve done much harm except from time to time. But we have prevented ourselves from doing much good in society. It has prevented us from being that leaven which we are called to be. And on this island to use our unique position to facilitate the sort of critical dialogue between and within the different jurisdictions on this island,” the Bishop added.

Slay the GDPR challenges with the latest payroll software. For more information visit: onlinepayrolluk.wordpress.com/2018/10/27/slay-the-gdpr-ch...

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Valerie Wolf Gang

Presonal Space Data Collection

 

Ozmo/za

6 February 2019

 

Production: Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, 2019

 

Photo: Miha Fras

 

MORE: personalspacedatacollection.com/

 

Sarkis Khoury's profile is secured to the strictest privacy by VirtualU Privacy-Shield. Sarkis Khoury's data privacy settings have been set to the strictest settings and to abide by this website's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions. You're activity here will not be shared with 3rd parties unless it is necessary for this website to provide service to you. Get your own Live Social Media Monitoring, Data Privacy Protection or have a Guru help secure your "Virtual You". virtualu.net/shop/?wpam_id=17

 

tags: privacy, shield, personal, business, data, social media, monitoring, software, service, tool, cloud, squad, guru, company, dashboard, free, trial, US, EU, GDPR, certification, list, principles, requirements, self certification, compliance, suspension, onward transfer, right to be forgotten, ORM, online, reputation, management, company, business, website, software, do it yourself, service, bank account, credit score, attorneys, doctors, dentists, restaurants, students, children, family, for dummies, contact, near me

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The Bishop of Clogher, Right Revd John McDowell, has spoken of the ‘intolerable burden’ that regulations place on voluntary organisations in his Presidential Address to Clogher Diocesan Synod on 26th September.

 

Speaking at the Synod held in the Cathedral Hall, Enniskillen, Bishop McDowell also referred to the 150th anniversary of Disestablishment and the continuing uncertainty over Brexit. He has already sent an open letter to the Prime Minister.

 

The Bishop told the Synod: “Last year at this Synod I had some cautious and cautionary words to say about Brexit. But whatever uncertainty existed then has now been deepened by all sorts of developments since and, whatever happens, has brought the whole of the UK to a ‘constitutional moment.’

 

“Insofar as I have had anything to say about these matters I hope I have done so from a Kingdom perspective where the love of one’s neighbour is the guiding standard. I hope you will remember in your private and public devotions the complex and far reaching events which will unfold in the weeks to come. Pray that what beginnings of peace and integration which we have in this part of the world are sufficient to help us understand one another in a world where barriers are going up rather than coming down.”

 

Speaking about Safeguarding and GDPR, Bishop McDowell referred to the series of training events which have been held throughout the Diocese.

 

He said: “I think now is a good time to say something about what might become the intolerable burden which regulatory regimes are demanding of voluntary organisations. The Church is a significant provider of services especially to young people but also to adults of all ages.

 

“Although there are times when we could have been done better and other occasions when the Church actually inflicted grave harm, for the most part those services have enriched the lives of individuals and communities for hundreds of years. And they are organised and delivered on an almost entirely voluntary basis. And that culture of voluntarism is frankly being undermined by an obsession with regulation that isn’t particularly nuanced or, at times, even proportionate.

 

“As a church we are probably in greater danger of atrophying and withering through the excessive demands on our volunteers on select vestries, diocesan boards and council, youth organisations and other fellowship groups, than we are from doctrinal or other spiritual matters. And I know this is the experience of many other Christian traditions and indeed non–religious groups. And it needs to be taken into account,” said Bishop McDowell.

 

The Bishop also referred to the needs of parishes and recommended that parishes should work collaboratively.

 

He explained: “It has also become very clear to me as I go around the Diocese and speak to those involved very close to the ground that the traditional model of self–sufficient and stand–alone parishes or groups of parishes probably cannot be sustained for very much longer.

 

“The breadth of skills necessary to maintain and run a parish no longer exists in a single person no matter how gifted they are and it is clear that much greater collaboration will be needed between parishes and within groups of parishes than has been the case up to now. For instance a group of three parishes needs a total of 18 ‘officers’ if you take into account churchwardens, glebewardens, treasurers and secretaries. A union of three parishes would require just 10 (if there are still church buildings in each of the parishes).

 

“It is also worth thinking about just how much closer a spirit of cooperation is to the spirit of the Gospel than a spirit of competition or of utter independence. Even where a full union of parishes isn’t or can’t be achieved there is no reason why informal collaboration shouldn’t be explored,” he said, adding that parishes should explore external funding opportunities.

 

Bishop McDowell also commented on the 150th anniversary of Distablishment and said that the Irish Church Act passed in July and which came into effect on 31 December 1869 completed the nineteenth century parliamentary reform of the Church of Ireland. Now, in 1869, the Church of Ireland, united to the Church of England since the Act of Union in 1801 was to be separated, disendowed and disestablished. Fiercely opposed at the time, the Church’s Disestablishment was its liberation.

 

“Whatever might otherwise have happened, Disestablishment enables the Church of Ireland, like the other churches to continue as one church in two civil jurisdictions. This has allowed it (perhaps required it) to speak to either civil jurisdiction conscious of its place in the other and to speak to both from a grounding in the Kingdom of God.

 

“Disestablishment therefore set the Church of Ireland free to be what it is, a minority tradition in the Body of Christ, a church on the same standing as others in the family of God, one branch of the True Vine. Ours is a church, that, tracing its history through the often–complex history of these islands cherishes its identity as Catholic and Reformed. It is part of a world–wide communion of churches and of developing ecumenical institutions.

 

“Without being backward looking or inward looking we have much to thank the Disestablishment generation for, particularly in the financial and administrative arrangements which they devised in very short order and which have survived more or less intact right down to today.

 

“But there are one or two matters about Establishment and Disestablishment of the Church which we would do well to acknowledge and learn from today.

 

“First, that Establishment and all the Acts of Parliament that supported it over the years were not only intended to give the Church of Ireland a privileged position far beyond its numbers. At best only 12% of the population of Ireland ever belonged even in the most nominal sense to the Church of Ireland.

 

“And secondly to note that the 'Establishment mentality' of the Church of Ireland didn’t cease with the passing of the Irish Church Act. Certainly over time we learnt not to depend on Big House generosity for our well-being. Certainly we learned to stand on our own two feet financially and indeed spiritually (the Church of Ireland has always been the most clearly 'Protestant' of the Anglican churches of these islands). As a result of this rather strong self–preservation instinct both North and South it’s not that we’ve done much harm except from time to time. But we have prevented ourselves from doing much good in society. It has prevented us from being that leaven which we are called to be. And on this island to use our unique position to facilitate the sort of critical dialogue between and within the different jurisdictions on this island,” the Bishop added.

Cell phones, tablets, and computers, what do they all have in common? Besides the fact that they are all technological devices and have similar components, they all contain important data. More specifically, information about the device owner. But who determines what happens to this data? Is it the owner’s decision or is it up to websites and companies who get their hands on it? This is where data privacy laws come into play.

 

Here's a list of the most notable data privacy laws from around the world.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Koukichi Takahashi Photography

koukichi-t.com/archives/7491

 

I’m selling this on EyeEm

 

Facebookログインでサードパーティ製アプリにアクセスしたという証拠は見つかっていない。Facebook9000万人強制ログアウト、情報流出事件続報。最新ニュース速報2018

先週発生したFacebookサイバー攻撃によるデータ漏洩、約9000万人を強制ログアウトした問題について新たに発表。

 

Facebook Login Update | Facebook Newsroom

We’ve had questions about what exactly this attack means for...

 

#Facebook

 

#App, #FACEBOOK, #FacebookDataBreach, #FacebookDataBreach2018, #FacebookGDPR, #FacebookViewAs, #Facebookおかしい, #Facebookアクセストークンリセット, #Facebookクラッカー, #Facebookサイバー攻撃, #Facebookデータ流出, #Facebookトラブル, #Facebookハッカー, #Facebookハッキング, #Facebook乗っ取り, #Facebook乗っ取り9月27日, #Facebook個人情報, #Facebook個人情報流出, #Facebook勝手にログアウト, #Facebook勝手にログアウト9月27日, #Facebook問題, #Facebook問題9月27日, #Facebook強制ログアウト, #Facebook強制ログアウト9月27日, #Facebook情報漏洩, #Facebook最新情報, #Facebook脆弱性, #Facebook障害9月27日, #Facebook障害情報, #Facebook障害発生, #FACEBOOKフェイスブック, #GAFA, #GDPR, #SNS, #SocialMedia, #アプリ, #セキュリティ, #データ流出, #フェイスブック

 

Policymakers around the world are grappling with how to manage the effects of current and future digital technologies on society, particularly in the areas of privacy, free expression, and other fundamental freedoms. The experience to date with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has generated questions on how greater transparency and notice to internet users can effectively protect privacy. Meanwhile, U.S. regulators and Congress are actively considering similar steps to strengthen data protection and penalize social media companies for transgressing consumers’ rights. Hosted by the Foreign Policy program at Brookings, the sixth annual Justice Stephen Breyer Lecture on International Law examined these issues at the intersection of comparative law, technology, ethics, and human rights. Jeroen van den Hoven, professor of ethics and technology at Delft University of Technology in The Netherlands, gave keynote remarks. He was then be joined for a panel discussion by Cameron Kerry, former general counsel at the U.S. Department of Commerce and distinguished fellow at Brookings, and Bilyana Petkova, assistant professor of international and European law at Maastricht University and fellow-in-residence at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. Nicol Turner Lee, fellow in the Brookings Center for Technology Innovation, moderated the discussion. After the program, the speakers answered questions from the audience.

 

Photo Credit: Paul Morigi

As Europe prepares for sweeping reforms in data privacy and security through the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), equally important laws may be on the cards for Australia.

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The European Data of Tomorrow Conference was both an educating and inspiring event about information,

data and all its relevant, innovative and value-adding aspects. Data of Tomorrow gave attendees a glimpse of the future of Master Data Management (MDM), technology and industry trends – and the tools to shape it. The conference took place on September 20 and 21 in the EYE filmmuseum in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

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