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A regulatory conundrum
Published in Robert Herian, Regulating Blockchain, 2018
Rights for ‘data subjects’ under GDPR include: access to personal data and supplementary information, which involves submission of a subject access request (SAR); objections to certain forms of processing including direct marketing and for research and statistics; rectification of inaccurate and incomplete personal data; erasure of personal data, otherwise known as ‘the right to be forgotten’; the restriction of processing of personal data; rights relating to profiling and automated decision making, a right that could impinge upon the ‘invisible’ machine-to-machine capabilities that blockchain is able to facilitate via smart contracts; and claims for compensation for damage caused by a data breach. Further, limitations on transferring data and information outside of the EU other than for prescribed reasons, places restrictions on the free flow across geographical and jurisdictional space. Many of the rights and restrictions the GDPR introduces contradict the ways in which existing global computer networks operate, and this includes blockchain.
Secure Cloud Query Processing Based on Access Control for Big Data Systems
Published in Bhavani Thuraisngham, Murat Kantarcioglu, Latifur Khan, Secure Data Science, 2022
Bhavani Thuraisngham, Murat Kantarcioglu, Latifur Khan
Subject access: With this access level an agent may read the subject's information over all the files. This is one of the less restrictive access levels. The subject can be a DataType or BlankNode.
Professionalism: Development and Career Progression in Informatics
Published in Alexander Peck, Clark’s Essential PACS, RIS and Imaging Informatics, 2017
3 Legal and compliance. Compliance with information standards notices, data set change notices, authoring policies, audits, SOPs, managing governance issues surrounding security, user administration, research projects, records retention, subject access, and FoIA requests are just part of this facet.
Finding, getting and understanding: the user journey for the GDPR’S right to access
Published in Behaviour & Information Technology, 2022
Dominik Pins, Timo Jakobi, Gunnar Stevens, Fatemeh Alizadeh, Jana Krüger
However, for companies and organisations in general, this new framework raises uncertainty regarding requirements for compliance with the regulation. For the case of the right to access data, organisations need to implement a process for users to claim their data, but it is still unclear how such a subject access request (SAR) process should be designed, how authentication should work, how data should be requested, provided, presented, and explained to customers in a compliant and customer-friendly way.