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View all search resultsAfter the launch of a new national artificial intelligence center, experts have warned that the government may be moving too quickly on the tech's development while remaining sluggish in working for the regulations mandating safeguards for its users.
A ransomware scare has, once again, rung alarm bells surrounding the state of Indonesia’s digital security, which analysts warn has seen little improvement despite the enactment of a privacy law two years ago.
Cybersecurity watchdogs have slammed the government for moving at a snail’s pace in devising implementing regulations for the Personal Data Protection (PDP) Law, particularly since the two-year deadline has already passed and millions of items of data have been stolen and sold on the dark web in a string of hacking incidents lately.
Because of the absence of clear guidelines on what constitutes "strong evidence" of children's regular access to a platform, predicting whether a platform will ultimately be classified as “likely to be accessed and/or used by children” remains challenging.
Lawmakers passed into law on Tuesday a long-awaited privacy bill that grants citizens more control over their personal information online and seeks to spur cybersecurity improvements amid a recent string of digital attacks in the country.
Policymakers have agreed to give the President the authority to establish a data protection oversight agency, but many questions remain about the draft privacy bill, with critics believing public institutions found in violation of privacy will still enjoy impunity.
The guidelines scrap the local terms “people under observation” (ODP) and “patients under surveillance” (PDP) in favor of “suspected” and “probable” cases, and also expands the definition of COVID-19 deaths "for surveillance purposes" to include the deaths of probable cases.
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