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Microsoft Defender Application Guard’s Hyper-V malicious detection is being abandoned in favor of a faster rules-based design.
This adds to the mounting legal challenges for the search engine giant, which is currently facing an antitrust trial in the US.
The US government has accused Google of manipulating the ad tech market, stifling competition and innovation; the company recently lost an antitrust case targeting its search business.
Finding comes as a second of two antitrust trials against the tech giant for monopolistic advertising practices begins in the US, a portend of further regulatory trouble ahead.
Thursday’s announcement of the deal adds to the all-but-infinite list of global AI compliance rules that enterprises must somehow master.
This could set a significant precedent for applying GDPR in AI training, particularly in the creation and use of embeddings in AI models.
How can CIOs tell customers what data is being collected about them and how it is being used if the CIOs themselves don’t know exactly what their genAI tools are doing?
The Data Protection Commission alleges that X’s use of Grok violates GDPR guidelines on data protection and privacy and suggests a new version of Grok could worsen existing issues.
Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) regulations are on the rise. And increasing pressures around ESG concerns have organizations across industries turning to their CIOs to revamp their strategies for ESG reporting.
Corporate privacy policies are supposed to reassure customers that their data is safe. So why are companies listing every possible way they can use that data?
Given the plethora of privacy rules already in place in Europe, how are companies with shiny, new, not-understood genAI tools supposed to comply? (Hint: they can’t.)
The move toward ubiquitous electronic health record sharing across the US is accelerating, but obstacles remain for providers, payers, patients, and other stakeholders.
Progress on ratifying the Trans-Atlantic Data Policy Framework hit a snag, as a parliamentary committee rejected a draft decision to adopt the pact, saying it did not comply with the EU's GDPR privacy regulations.
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is, in some ways, similar to Europe's GDPR. This rule, which goes into effect in 2020, gives individual users more ownership over their own data. Users can even refuse to allow companies to sell their online data. As the compliance deadline approaches, CSO Online contributor Maria Korolov and senior editor Michael Nadeau discuss with Juliet how CCPA may shift business models, change online behavior and reveal where exactly our data has been. Some tech companies, like Google, are even trying to exempt themselves from regulation. Failure to adhere to the rule could be an "extinction level" event.