Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
E-Business
Networking
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

European official vows to go forward with U.S. data-privacy deal

 

Sign up to receive Security Resource Alerts

July 14, 2000 (Computerworld) -- The European Union official who led negotiations over the proposed "safe harbor" data-privacy rules for U.S. companies that do business in Europe yesterday said he would recommend that the rules be adopted as is, despite last week's vote by the European Parliament requesting a series of changes.
Frits Bolkestein, the European commissioner for internal markets, told the parliament's Civil Liberties Committee in Brussels that he plans to advise the full European Commission to adopt a draft version of the safe harbor provisions as "adequate protection" for personal data transferred from the 15 member states of the European Union to the U.S.
According to a report posted on the European Commission's Web site, Bolkestein said the parliament's resolution last week didn't claim the commission had acted beyond its powers in earlier assessments that the provisions would be enough to make U.S. companies compliant with stringent European privacy regulations.
The resolution approved by the parliament criticized the safe harbor agreement as inadequate and called on U.S. and European officials to go back to the negotiating table (see story). However, under the rules of the European Union, the European Commission isn't legally obligated to grant the parliament's demands.
The agreement has been in the works for nearly two years through a series of talks between U.S. and European officials. Its provisions are supposed to clear the way for U.S.-based companies to engage in e-commerce transactions with European customers and to continue downloading employee information from corporate databases in Europe.
Bolkestein did promise yesterday to convey the European Parliament's concerns about the agreement to his counterparts at the U.S. Department of Commerce. And he also said the European Commission would seek to reopen negotiations at a later date if the legal remedies available to European citizens who feel their privacy has been breached prove to be too weak.
In Washington, a Commerce Department spokesman said officials there are "pleased that the commission has chosen to move forward with the adequacy determination." He added that the Commerce Department plans to work closely with European officials to determine the exact timing for issuing documents that officially lay out the safe harbor provisions.
Related stories:




Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
"Mozilla's successful attempt to set a world record for downloads of a single program, Firefox 3 was dumb...." Read more...
"It's IT Blogwatch: in which Microsoft is to acquire Powerset, to beef up its search engine. Not to mention how..." Read more...
Read more E-Business & Web 2.0 posts or See all Blogs
Microsoft promises four patches next week
Google gives away home-cooked Web application security scanner
Storm botnet stages Fourth of July attacks
More top stories...
Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8
Apple cuts price of high-end SSD MacBook Air by $500
Ultrathin showdown: Apple MacBook Air vs. Lenovo ThinkPad X300 vs. Toshiba Portege R500
All it takes is a couple hours and about $125 to breathe new life into an old laptop. Here's how.
Is Microsoft's Golden Age over? What are Gates' most memorable quotes? Find out in Computerworld's complete coverage of the end of the Bill Gates era at Microsoft.
There are some things your CIO definitely doesn't want to hear. Also don't miss the flipside, Five things you should always tell your boss.
With its latest version, Mozilla's browser continues to raise the bar for what Web browsers should be.
Reviews, analyses, how-tos, visual tours, hot issues and predictions about Microsoft's new OS.
Four years from now, the IT field will be a vastly different place. Will you be ready?
All Zones
Application Performance Zone
Business Continuity Zone
Data Center Management Zone
Enterprise-Class Security Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Grid Computing on Windows Zone
Security Management Zone
ITIL Best Practices Zone
The SAS Zone
Storage Virtualization Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Bringing Order and Security to your Mobile Workforce: Corporate Mobility Policy and Device Management
Bringing Order and Security to your Mobile Workforce: Corporate Mobility Policy and Device Management
LIVE WEBCAST
This webcast will air on Thursday, May 8th.
Go to the webcast 
Adventist Health Improves Document Access with Single Supplier Solution
Download this white paper, free, compliments of Kodak!
(Source: Kodak) Until 2003, Adventist Health System- headquartered in Orlando, FL-relied on a paper-based filing system to manage medical records. The not-for-profit healthcare system, with over 45,000 employees, wanted to improve access to patient records at all of its 40 hospitals in 10 states. And when they transitioned to an electronic medical records system, the organization wanted to work with the best one-vendor solution for scanners.
Download this white paper go
Computerworld Technology Briefing: Meetings @ the Speed of Business
Download this Technology Briefing now, compliments of Microsoft!
(Source: Microsoft) For large organizations, Web conferencing gives a major boost to collaboration among far-flung offices. For smaller companies, experts say Web conferencing is no longer a luxury but a necessity for everything from webinars to customer presentations. But the real value lies in saving soft costs and in increases in productivity.
Download this executive briefing download
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
Deploying Virtualized NetWare on Linux Whitepaper
Toward More Flexible, Next-Generation Collaboration Solutions
Driving Business Success Through Workgroup Choice and Flexibility
View more whitepapers 
Troubleshooting Remote Site Networks - Best Practices
Management and remote site employees expect the same level of network service as the headquarters site. However, when IT staff are faced with limited resources to support remote site networks, often the applications, services and performance at those sites is not as robust as the headquarters site. See how to deliver a high level of network service at remote sites using the best practices outlined in this white paper.

Read whitepaper now
Super-size your LAN with fiber
Fiber optic technology frees the Local Area Network (LAN) from the confines of a single building, allowing a LAN to extend across a campus or a metropolitan area. Read how the selection of fiber optic components affects repeaterless transmission distance and how one school district used fiber to build a more reliable and more cost effective high-speed, district-wide network. Also, read how Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) ownership may require self-assessment of network performance.

Read whitepaper now
Determining the cause of poor application performance
Are users constantly complaining that your network is too slow? Or that they can’t connect or can't stay connected? Are network applications hanging and slowing productivity? Do you spend way too much time trying to isolate the source of the problem and to prove that often the issue isn't the network at all but the application? In this on demand webcast, learn best practices and common root causes of application problems using case studies and live network traffic.

Watch webcast now