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Processor means a natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which processes personal data on behalf of the controller. Under the GDPR the controller and data processor have many ...
Learn the key differences between data controllers and data processors under GDPR and how they impact your online business's data protection obligations.
Podnar continued: What I do find fascinating is that organizations are vying to have themselves categorized as a processor (over a controller) given that under the GDPR, processors are more exposed ...
But under the GDPR, data controllers must show that their processors maintain adequate data security measures in order to do business with them. Business partners will almost certainly ask for some ...
The crux of the debate is the definition of controller vs. processor. GDPR defines the controller as the entity that determines how personal data is processed. It defines the processor as the provider ...
Under Article 7(1) of the GDPR, data controllers must also be able to “demonstrate that the data subject has consented to processing of his or her personal data.” According to the WP29, “[c]ontrollers ...
Organisations worldwide increasingly rely on third-party data ... Processing Agreements (DPAs) written by the processor. Processor-Favoured DPA agreements often favour the processor, not the ...
I’ve attended a quite a few workshops and webinars on GDPR and I'm a little wiser on most of the steps I need to take. At these workshops, they have implied that the business/employer is the data ...
Data controllers and data processors are the two main types of parties which are involved in the processing and, under the GDPR, duties regarding the protection of personal data so it’s clear that ...