The Industrial Internet of Things also known as Industry 4.0 has the highest potentials of growth within the IoT, but it hides relevant legal issues.
How compliance with change or even disappear with the digital revolution of the coming years, including the Internet of Things and artificial intelligence?
The development of Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies raises the issue on whether they should also act ethically.
An investigation run by 26 privacy authorities showed that 60% of the reviewed Internet of Things technologies did not pass the test of compliance with data protection laws.
No software is 100% secure, and Internet of Things technology is no different. However, because of public perception it is even more important for the IoT industry to find "adequate" safety standards to meet businesses' and consumers' cybersecurity needs.
The approval by the European Commission of the E.U.-U.S. Privacy Shield replacing the Safe Harbor program led to questions on how stable such scheme will be.
Here is the recording of the webinar on the impact of the EU Privacy Regulation on Internet of Things technologies.
A data protection impact assessment represents an obligation under the EU Privacy Regulation in case of high-risk data processing activities, but how and when shall it be done?
The review by privacy regulators of Internet of Things (IoT) technologies together with the joint initiative on connected cars and self-driving cars might be an essential step towards IoT rules.
The Internet of Things is leading to a shift from a business based on products to a business of services, triggering new legal issues to which companies might not be prepared.