by Barry Weber | Oct 3, 2023 | datasecurity, GDPR, HIPAA, privacy
.The Washington My Health My Data Act (WHMDA) is a new law that aims to protect the privacy and security of personal health information in Washington State. The law applies to any entity that collects, uses, or discloses personal health information in Washington or...
by Barry Weber | Feb 26, 2021 | Blog, CCPA, CPRA, cybersecurity, datasecurity, GDPR, HIPAA, Risk Management
Announcing a Secure The Village Webinar on Cybersecurity (without boiling the ocean) Date and Time: March 11, 2021 (10-11am PT) Description: Organizations struggle with many cybersecurity issues demanding attention, time and money. These issues include managing...
by Barry Weber | Feb 10, 2021 | Blog, CCPA, CPRA, datasecurity, GDPR, PEPIDA, privacy
Minimizing privacy requirements is good for business At Assured SPC, we help businesses satisfy regulatory and third-party requirements for information security and consumer/resident privacy. Whenever possible, we provide guidance on how to avoid and minimize cost...
by Barry Weber | Oct 11, 2020 | Blog, CCPA, datasecurity, GDPR, HIPAA
Reasonable Security in the Law Many laws require that businesses implement “reasonable security” practices and procedures or reasonable security safeguards. Some of these include GLBA, HIPAA, CCPA and the NY SHIELD Act. Many find that the definition of reasonable...
by Barry Weber | Sep 20, 2020 | CCPA, CPRA, datasecurity, GDPR, PEPIDA, privacy
Comparison of GDPR, CCPA, CPRA and PEPIDA Comparing privacy laws can be challenging Some US companies need to comply with GDPR. Others need to comply with the California Consumer Privacy Act, CCPA. If the California CPRA ballot initiative passes in November, US...
by Barry Weber | Jul 16, 2020 | CCPA, datasecurity, GDPR, privacy
New Restrictions for GDPR data in the US – Updated Disclaimer: We specialize in operationalizing data security and privacy requirements and work closely with security and privacy attorneys, but we are not attorneys. The European Court of Justice ruled yesterday...