NEW YORK – United States companies doing business abroad are grumbling over new European privacy laws set to take effect in less than one year. The EU privacy rules are far more stringent than U.S. laws, and are meant to give consumers the upper hand when it comes to controlling what data is stored by companies online.
In a discussion at the Borderless Cyber conference, Clare Sullivan, Georgetown University professor at the Law Center, and a Fellow at the Center on National Security and the Law, said business-to-business sharing of personal data is about to get more complicated.
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