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We are also getting a hint of the power that bigdata, AI and machine learning will. Unlike any other time in history, the past decade has shown us the power of technology to transform our working and personal lives. Technology-enabled shopping, banking and working from any location made the restrictions from COVID-19 more manageable.
We are subject to numerous laws and regulations designed to protect this information, such as the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”), the United Kingdom’s GDPR, the California Consumer Privacy Act (and its successor the California Privacy Rights Act that will go into effect on January 1, 2023), as well as various other U.S.
As if things were not difficult enough, data collection in more states and countries is becoming stricter, with increased consumer protection laws leaving retailers applying tighter dataprivacy to their digital platforms. The human element risk cannot be understated.
As if things were not difficult enough, data collection in more states and countries is becoming stricter, with increased consumer protection laws leaving retailers applying tighter dataprivacy to their digital platforms. The human element risk cannot be understated.
In the era of bigdata , companies generate and store vast amounts of information. This data takes many forms, ranging from highly confidential data to less sensitive analytics. Cloud services offer many advantages for data management, including scalability, cost efficiency, and enhanced collaboration.
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