Last updated : May 05, 2015
NOT ON THE CURRENT EDITION
This blip is not on the current edition of the Radar. If it was on one of the last few editions, it is likely that it is still relevant. If the blip is older, it might no longer be relevant and our assessment might be different today. Unfortunately, we simply don't have the bandwidth to continuously review blips from previous editions of the Radar.
Understand more
May 2015
Trial
The term Datensparsamkeit is taken from German privacy legislation and describes the idea to only store as much personal information as is absolutely required for the business or applicable laws. Customer privacy continues to be a hot topic. Companies such as Uber are apparently collecting highly personal customer data, as well as being quite lax with security. This is a disaster waiting to happen. Following datensparsamkeit or using de-identification techniques even in jurisdictions where it is not legally mandated, can allow you to reduce the information you store. If you never store the information, you do not need to worry about someone stealing it.
Jan 2015
Trial
Jul 2014
Assess
In our desire to support ever-changing business models, learn from past behavior and provide the best experience for every individual visitor, we are tempted to record as much data as possible. At the same time hackers are more ferocious than ever, with one spectacular security breach after another, and we now know of unprecedented mass-surveillance by government agencies. The term Datensparsamkeit is taken from German privacy legislation and describes the idea to only store as much personal information as is absolutely required for the business or applicable laws. Some examples are instead of storing a customer's full IP address in access logs, just using the first two or three octets and instead of logging transit journeys with a username using an anonymous token. If you never store the information, you do not need to worry about someone stealing it.
Jan 2014
Assess
Published : Jan 28, 2014