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GDPR
What is GDPR?
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regulates EU law on data protection and privacy in the European Union and the European Economic Area. Under the GDPR, an individual has:

The right to access:
Every individual can request to access their data and ask how the company is using their data. The company has to provide a copy of the personal data, free of charge, and electronic format if requested.
The right to be forgotten:
Suppose a consumer is no longer customer, or if they are showing their consent to withdraw their data from a company, they have the right to have their data deleted.


The right to data portability:
Every individual has a right to transfer their data from one service provider to another. And this should happen in a commonly used and machine-readable format.
The right to be informed:
Every individual ought to be informed before their data is gathered. For the data to be collected, a consumer must opt-in or, in other words, give their consent.


The right to have the information corrected:
Individuals can have their data updated if the stored data is outdated or incorrect.
The right to restrict processing:
An individual can limit a company from using the data for processing. Their record can remain in place but can’t be used.


The right to object:
It is about the right of individuals to stop the processing of their data for direct marketing. And this right should be made clear to individuals at the very start of any communication. There is no exemption for any in the case of this right.
The right to be notified:
In case of a data breach, the individual must be informed within 72 hours.

Now that you are aware of what is GDPR and its fundamental right for an individual, the question is, “does the GDPR affect B2B data?”
GDPR makes a difference in the way you use B2B data. You need to make sure that you’re using it in GDPR compliant way. It is meant to protect the privacy of individuals within the EU, including the people working within companies.
To know more about how our data is complaint to GDPR, please click below
CCPA
What is California consumer privacy act?
This bill is focused on protecting consumer privacy. That includes how companies use and/or sell their personal information and data, giving consumers more control over how that’s handled.
The bill grants consumers the right to:
- Request a business to disclose the categories and specific pieces of personal information that it collects about them — and how that information is used
- Opt-out of the sale of their personal information
- Non-discrimination for exercising their CCPA rights
- Categories of third parties with which the information is shared
- Request deletion of personal information — and business must delete upon receiving a request
The main point of the bill is to give any California consumer the right to demand to see the information a company has saved on them. It also allows consumers to see a full list of the third parties that data is shared with.