Articles from Around the Web

Discover the latest industry insights and developments with our News from Around the Web page. We curate feeds from a variety of reputable organizations, bringing you a comprehensive overview of relevant news and trends. Stay informed and connected with the most current updates from across the web.

ANPD seeks public comment on proposed DPO regulation

Brazil's data protection authority, the Autoridade Nacional de Proteção de Dados, is seeking public comment on a proposed regulation defining the role of a data protection officer. The regulation will reflect requirements under Article 41 of the General Personal Data Protection Law. The comment period is open until 7 Dec. A public hearing will also be announced in the future.Full story

Advocate files YouTube ePrivacy Directive claim

A complaint filed by privacy advocate Alexander Hanff, CIPP/E, CIPT, FIP, claims YouTube's ad blocker detection system violates the EU ePrivacy Directive. Hanff alleged YouTube did not receive permission from users before implementing the detection system. YouTube Senior Communications Manager Christopher Lawton said users agreed to the platform's terms of service and the "use of ad blockers" violates that agreement.Full story

CNIL issues 10 penalties over employee monitoring practices

France's data protection authority, the Commission nationale de l'informatique et des libertés, issued 10 sanctions over recent months to private and public entities totaling 97,000 euros. The nature of the complaints included processing the geolocation data of employees driving company vehicles while on their breaks and the use of video surveillance of employees at their workstations.

New York State Bar Association backs facial recognition limitations

A New York State Bar Association working group is recommending the organization push to change the state's civil rights law to prevent entertainment venues from using facial recognition to deny customers admission. It also asks the NYSBA to back legislation allowing consumers to sue private groups who collect biometric information without their consent.Full story

Lessig, Harris on case involving First Amendment, children's design code

In an op-ed for Slate, Center for Humane Technology Executive Director Tristan Harris and Harvard University law professor Lawrence Lessig write that a federal court's injunction to stop enforcement of the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act was a demonstration of corporate interests taking advantage of the First Amendment to block legislation to make children's online experience safer.