Activist Max Schrems accuses Facebook and Google of GDPR breachPrivacy campaigner files complaints against tech giants over EU’s new rules on customer dataUS news sites blocked to EU users on GDPR launch dayRush to comply with data deadline also triggers crash at UK regulatorGDPR will hinder luxury’s fight against fakes, say executivesExperts say restricted access to data will hit battle against counterfeitsGDPR is a start, but not enough to protect privacy on its ownWe also need technology to work with consumers, not against themExplainer: how Europe’s data law worksEU data protection chief confident regulator can police GDPRAndrea Jelinek defends resources as privacy groups line up first actionsMore from this SeriesThe test for GDPR will be in its enforcementThe burden of keeping companies in line falls on member statesInformation wars: How Europe became the world’s data policeThe EU’s rules for data privacy were once derided as restrictive, but after the Facebook scandal Brussels hopes they will help bring big tech to heelEurope sets a high bar on privacy with GDPRIt is likely to take an onslaught of complaints to test the limits of the new regimeUS companies wrestle with new European privacy rulesLast-minute scramble to bring businesses into compliance with GDPRUS small businesses drop EU customers over new data ruleStart-ups and game developers among those deciding against costs and risks of GDPRGDPR emails highlight variable advice ahead of new data regimeInboxes are inundated but some experts say many plaintive messages are unnecessaryData protectionism: the growing menace to global businessChina’s digital protectionism is as great a threat as barriers it puts up for physical goodsGDPR is here at last. What does it mean for consumers?Europe bets its data law will lead to tech supremacyCompanies need to be more vigilant in safeguarding users’ digital assetsWhat the EU’s tough new privacy rules mean for Big TechGDPR could see fines of €20m or more for companies that fail to protect user data
Activist Max Schrems accuses Facebook and Google of GDPR breachPrivacy campaigner files complaints against tech giants over EU’s new rules on customer dataUS news sites blocked to EU users on GDPR launch dayRush to comply with data deadline also triggers crash at UK regulatorGDPR will hinder luxury’s fight against fakes, say executivesExperts say restricted access to data will hit battle against counterfeitsGDPR is a start, but not enough to protect privacy on its ownWe also need technology to work with consumers, not against themExplainer: how Europe’s data law worksEU data protection chief confident regulator can police GDPRAndrea Jelinek defends resources as privacy groups line up first actionsMore from this SeriesThe test for GDPR will be in its enforcementThe burden of keeping companies in line falls on member statesInformation wars: How Europe became the world’s data policeThe EU’s rules for data privacy were once derided as restrictive, but after the Facebook scandal Brussels hopes they will help bring big tech to heelEurope sets a high bar on privacy with GDPRIt is likely to take an onslaught of complaints to test the limits of the new regimeUS companies wrestle with new European privacy rulesLast-minute scramble to bring businesses into compliance with GDPRUS small businesses drop EU customers over new data ruleStart-ups and game developers among those deciding against costs and risks of GDPRGDPR emails highlight variable advice ahead of new data regimeInboxes are inundated but some experts say many plaintive messages are unnecessaryData protectionism: the growing menace to global businessChina’s digital protectionism is as great a threat as barriers it puts up for physical goodsGDPR is here at last. What does it mean for consumers?Europe bets its data law will lead to tech supremacyCompanies need to be more vigilant in safeguarding users’ digital assetsWhat the EU’s tough new privacy rules mean for Big TechGDPR could see fines of €20m or more for companies that fail to protect user data