India's data privacy law, Gen Z and Privacy - Your Data Privacy Digest #6
Your Data Privacy Digest #6 - India's data privacy law, Gen Z and privacy

India's data privacy law, Gen Z and Privacy - Your Data Privacy Digest #6

Hello there,

Every week, we bring the freshest news from the data privacy industry to your inbox.?

From content published on the?Yes We Trust blog?to must-reads from across the web, this is your weekly digest to stay updated on what's going on in data privacy.

Comments, feedback, or suggestions for future pieces? Comment or join the conversation in the?Yes We Trust LinkedIn community.

Best,

The Yes We Trust team.


This week in Data Privacy

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India getting closer to an updated data protection regulation

In a recent interview, the Indian minister of state for IT and electronics, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, discussed the upcoming Indian data privacy regulation, the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) bill:

"I have absolutely no doubt that the DPDP Bill will create deep behavioural changes among platforms in India who have for long exploited and misused personal data"

Read the full story:

Gen Z and Privacy: How can brands adapt?

In our latest installment of the Privacy Sopbaox, writer Chitra Iyer tackles the topic of?Gen Z and privacy, and how businesses can understand the expectations of the largest consumer demographic today.

With Gen Z, the data has to be earned, not sneakily taken, coerced, demanded, or outright stolen. And for data to be earned, trust has to be earned.

Read the full deep dive:

Must-reads from around the web

  • Amazon settles Children’s Privacy Charges for $25 million?

Amazon has agreed last week to pay a civil penalty of $25 million to settle federal charges related to children's privacy.

The charges claimed that the company kept sensitive information collected from children for years (including precise locations and voice recordings), violating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA).

Read the report:

  • Texas becomes the 10th U.S. state to pass a consumer privacy bill?

Unless vetoed by Republican Governor Greg Abbott, the Texas Data Privacy and Security Act (SB 4) will go into effect in July 2023, joining the patchwork of laws currently in place in the United States.

Most interestingly, and similarly to California, Colorado, Connecticut, and Montana, the law will allow Texas residents to opt out of targeted ads on websites and apps.?

?Read more:

Watch it again: Your latest Yes We Trust event

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Last week, we had the pleasure of hosting Luiza Jarovsky , CEO and Co-Founder at Implement Privacy & Creator of Luiza's Newsletter , Estelle Hary co-founder at Design Friction , and Romain Gauthier , CEO at Didomi , to discuss privacy and UX.

If you missed it, watch the recording today:


Thank you for reading! For more news, in-depth articles, and webinars, visit the Yes We Trust?website?and join the?Yes We Trust community?on LinkedIn.

Best,

The Yes We Trust team.

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