I think the issue is that they just wouldn’t know. They didn’t know which customers were impacted. They didn’t know which users personal data might have been compromised. They most likely don’t have the ability to…
So if I'm reading this right, Okta was aware of a "compromise" of one of their sub-processors that impacted an unknown number of their customers/end users. They then waited more than 2 months before performing their own…
IANAL but this definitely seems like a breach of Art 33 of GDPR as it meets the criteria of involving personal data (list of users was exposed) and the 72 hour window has passed.
I'm no expert here but I thought it was the other way around. I remember seeing Rocket Internet clone several US based startups in the European market successfully. Either in selling them back to the original startup or…
I’m not a lawyer, but as far as I know GDPR only applies between a private individual and a company, not between two companies.
We don't currently, though we do have offices in SF and have a Technical Support Engineer position open there if that is any help.
Beekeeper | Software Engineer (Interns + Graduates + Experienced) | Zurich, Switzerland | ONSITE, Full Time Beekeeper is a fast growing, mobile-first SaaS company disrupting the way 2 billion people working "out in the…
Alternatively you could just encrypt the already encrypted data with the new key.
I never silently pass on exceptions any more as I've been bitten by way too many edge cases. You could imagine the case where your example is run by a different user to the owner of temp_file and fails to remove it due…
So I use almost exactly the same approach except in the VPN configuration options (I use Ubuntu 12.04) I just set the search domain to my-internal-name.blah, as well as, making sure the VPN connection is only used for…
I think the issue is that they just wouldn’t know. They didn’t know which customers were impacted. They didn’t know which users personal data might have been compromised. They most likely don’t have the ability to…
So if I'm reading this right, Okta was aware of a "compromise" of one of their sub-processors that impacted an unknown number of their customers/end users. They then waited more than 2 months before performing their own…
IANAL but this definitely seems like a breach of Art 33 of GDPR as it meets the criteria of involving personal data (list of users was exposed) and the 72 hour window has passed.
I'm no expert here but I thought it was the other way around. I remember seeing Rocket Internet clone several US based startups in the European market successfully. Either in selling them back to the original startup or…
I’m not a lawyer, but as far as I know GDPR only applies between a private individual and a company, not between two companies.
We don't currently, though we do have offices in SF and have a Technical Support Engineer position open there if that is any help.
Beekeeper | Software Engineer (Interns + Graduates + Experienced) | Zurich, Switzerland | ONSITE, Full Time Beekeeper is a fast growing, mobile-first SaaS company disrupting the way 2 billion people working "out in the…
Beekeeper | Software Engineer (Interns + Graduates + Experienced) | Zurich, Switzerland | ONSITE, Full Time Beekeeper is a fast growing, mobile-first SaaS company disrupting the way 2 billion people working "out in the…
Alternatively you could just encrypt the already encrypted data with the new key.
I never silently pass on exceptions any more as I've been bitten by way too many edge cases. You could imagine the case where your example is run by a different user to the owner of temp_file and fails to remove it due…
So I use almost exactly the same approach except in the VPN configuration options (I use Ubuntu 12.04) I just set the search domain to my-internal-name.blah, as well as, making sure the VPN connection is only used for…