DRACONIAN SOLUTION SOFTWARE
is a revolutionary secure communications, encryption and compliance software and service provider based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. But compliance is as easy as using Evizone. The GDPR is a complicated, bureaucratic law. Nothing is stored on external devices, meaning a stolen cellphone or computer will not compromise any information.Įvizone provides its clients with a closed high security zone to view and manage data the only way you can have true secure communications in the twenty-first century. That is why we offer the strongest commercially available system for secure communications and compliance archiving.Īll data transmitted through Evizone is protected with Evizone’s patented security architecture and military-grade encryption. The key takeaway is that the EU is imposing draconian measures to force organizations to take cybersecurity seriously.Įvizone was founded on the principle that no data can ever be stored safely without best in class security and encryption. We encourage our readers to learn more about how this new law will affect their day-to-day business. This only scratches the surface of how GDPR will affect data collection and breach management. Data processors will need to notify their customers of the same “without undue delay” or risk an astronomical fine. What would cause such a hefty fine? “Not having sufficient customer consent to process data” is one item of malice listed on the EU’s website.Įven though it can take days and weeks for companies to figure out what’s going on when they’ve been hacked, GDPR rules stipulate that Brussels will need to be notified of any breach of personal data within 72 hours. Non-compliance to the new rules is costly: organizations in breach of the rules can be fined up to 4% of annual global turnover or €20 million ($23.4 million USD), whichever is greater. The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) will be implemented on May 28, 2018, and it outlines how data on EU citizens can be stored by companies around the world. The European Union is about to make one of the most radical changes in data protection ever seen by a government, and it will affect any company collecting information on European individuals – even if they have no business on the continent.