External Policies and Practices constitute the most visible legal, communicative and governance layer of digital reliability. They determine how an organisation presents itself externally to clients, users, business partners, regulators, investors, suppliers and other stakeholders when personal data, digital interactions, security measures, cookies, tracking, retention periods, data sharing, data subject…
Read moreData governance forms the managerial ordering layer that determines whether data within an organisation can function as a reliable foundation for decision-making, risk control, supervision, reporting and accountability. In a digital environment in which personal data, client data, transaction data, operational signals, security logs, investigation information, supplier data, marketing profiles…
Read moreCybersecurity and Data Breaches do not constitute a separate technical domain within the digital organisation, but rather a combination of legal, operational, commercial, governance-related and reputationally sensitive risks that directly affect the core of digital reliability. Every organisation that processes data, uses systems, provides digital services, engages external suppliers or…
Read moreGDPR compliance must be understood as a central test of how an organisation gives legal, managerial and operational substance to its digital responsibility. It is not a peripheral requirement that becomes relevant only when a complaint, data breach, data subject request or supervisory investigation arises, but a foundational normative framework…
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