Posts Tagged ‘fromemail’
Podcast – Cat is out of the bag…
January 22, 2020IMDB paper- revisited
January 20, 2020IEEE awarded the IMDB paper “Test of Time” award and invited authors to write a revisit paper.
Can be found here:
http://randomwalker.info/publications/de-anonymization-retrospective.pdf
GA4GH GDPR brief
January 16, 2020Apollo 11
January 16, 2020Movie trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Co8Z8BQgWc
Review: t.ly/8wJjz
Apollo 11 flight data site: https://apolloinrealtime.org/11/
Jeremy Vine story on Boris Johnson
January 16, 2020Jeremy Vine: My Boris story
Leading broadcaster was booked on the same bill as the likely next Prime Minister. Here’s what happened.
BY JEREMY VINE / 17 JUNE 2019
Amazing portrait of someone comfortable in chaos
Apollo 11 podcast
January 16, 2020This one is really good: 13 minutes to the moon.
I also enjoyed this audiobook: Apollo.
And finally: Kennedy’s speech at Rice University on 12 Sep 1962.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w13xttx2/episodes/downloads https://www.amazon.com/Apollo/dp/B07QSYN2M8
https://youtu.be/WZyRbnpGyzQ
ESHG June 6-9 2020
January 16, 2020Amazon.com: science – New / Kindle Edition / Coming Soon
January 14, 2020Third party right to be forgotten
January 14, 2020QT:{{”
Does a company have to forward a right to be forgotten request to a third party with whom it has shared personal information?
….
In California the CCPA requires that (in certain situations) a business “delete the consumer’s personal information from its records and direct any service providers to delete the consumer’s personal information from their records.”1 In situations in which a business has shared a consumer’s personal information with another business or a third party, the CCPA does not require business A to inform business B that a deletion request has been received. That said, an amendment to the CCPA deferred the full impact of the Act upon employee data until January 1, 2021.2
In comparison, under the European GDPR when a controller receives a right to be forgotten request, and determines that it is required to delete information about an individual, the controller must “take reasonable steps” to “inform [other] controllers which are processing the personal data that the data subject has requested the erasure by such controllers of any links to, or copy or replication of, those personal data.”3 It is unclear based upon the text of the GDPR whether this requirement requires controller A to notify controller B that the data subject has requested controller A to erase data, or whether the requirement requires controller A to notify controller B that a data subject has requested erasure by both controller A and B.
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NSF formating
January 7, 2020Seems a bit different from the NIH requirements