Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protection
Latin[edit]
- Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protection Software
- Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protection Devices
- Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protections
Privatus 5.1.2 – Automated privacy protection. Privatus has been designed from the ground up with simplicity in mind. Built for ease of use, there. South Korea’s comprehensive Personal Information Protection Act was enacted Sept. It is one of the world’s strictest privacy regimes. The Pathless 1.0.5 – A mythic adventure Wasteland 3 1.3.255578 – Turn-Based RPG & Strategy Game Hacknet 5.069 – An immersive, terminal-based hacking simulator.
Etymology 1[edit]
- Session 1: Health Apps. Automated online privacy protection. For macOS 10.14+ Try it; Buy it; Privatus Highlights. Avoid spying and tracking of your personal browsing habits. Fully automated. After a quick initial setup, Privatus will keep you protected from tracking and online profiling without any further interaction.
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Perfect passive participle of prīvō(“I bereave, deprive; I free, release”).
Participle[edit]
prīvātus (feminineprīvāta, neuterprīvātum, adverbprīvātim); first/second-declension participle
- bereaved, deprived, robbed or stripped of something, having been deprived of something
- freed, released, set apart, delivered from something, having been released from
- (by extension) apart from the state; unofficial; peculiar, special, personal, individual, private
Declension[edit]
First/second-declension adjective.
Number | Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case / Gender | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter |
Nominative | prīvātus | prīvāta | prīvātum | prīvātī | prīvātae | prīvāta |
Genitive | prīvātī | prīvātae | prīvātī | prīvātōrum | prīvātārum | prīvātōrum |
Dative | prīvātō | prīvātō | prīvātīs | |||
Accusative | prīvātum | prīvātam | prīvātum | prīvātōs | prīvātās | prīvāta |
Ablative | prīvātō | prīvātā | prīvātō | prīvātīs | ||
Vocative | prīvāte | prīvāta | prīvātum | prīvātī | prīvātae | prīvāta |
Descendants[edit]
- → Brythonic: *priọd
- Breton: pried
- Cornish: pries
- Welsh: priod
- Catalan: privat
- → Danish: privat
- English: private
- → German: privat
- Galician: privado
- Italian: privato
- Ladin: privat
- → Norwegian Bokmål: privat
- → Norwegian Nynorsk: privat
- Old French: privé
- English: privy
- French: privé
- Occitan: privat
- Portuguese: privado
- Spanish: privado
- → Swedish: privat
Etymology 2[edit]
From prīvātus, perfect passive participle of prīvō(“I bereave, deprive; I free, release”).
Noun[edit]
prīvātusm (genitiveprīvātī); second declension
- A man holding no politicaloffice or associated with the cursus honorum.
- A man in a privatelife, citizen, member of the public.
Declension[edit]
Second-declension noun.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | prīvātus | prīvātī |
Genitive | prīvātī | prīvātōrum |
Dative | prīvātō | prīvātīs |
Accusative | prīvātum | prīvātōs |
Ablative | prīvātō | prīvātīs |
Vocative | prīvāte | prīvātī |
References[edit]
- privatus in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- privatus in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- privatus in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
- privatus in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
- Carl Meissner; Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[1], London: Macmillan and Co.
- private life: vita privata (Senect. 7. 22)
- a civil case: causa privata
- private life: vita privata (Senect. 7. 22)
8 fundamental rights of data subjects under GDPR
One of the key objectives of the new European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is to ensure the privacy and protection of the personal data of data subjects. To help data subjects in being assured of the protection and privacy of their personal data, GDPR empowers data subjects with certain rights. Through these rights, data subjects can make a specific request and be assured that personal data is not being misused for anything other than the legitimate purpose for which it was originally provided. Let us understand the different GDPR data subject rights and requests that a data subject can make as a customer, as an employee, and as personnel of a supplier.
1) Right to information
This right provides the data subject with the ability to ask a company for information about what personal data (about him or her) is being processed and the rationale for such processing. For example, a customer may ask for the list of processors with whom his or her personal data is shared.
2) Right to access
This right provides the data subject with the ability to get access to his or her personal data that is being processed. This request provides the right for data subjects to see or view their own personal data, as well as to request copies of the personal data.
3) Right to rectification
This right provides the data subject with the ability to ask for modifications to his or her personal data in case the data subject believes that this personal data is not up to date or accurate.
4) Right to withdraw consent
This right provides the data subject with the ability to withdraw a previously given consent for processing of their personal data for a purpose. The request would then require the company to stop the processing of the personal data that was based on the consent provided earlier.
5) Right to object
This right provides the data subject with the ability to object to the processing of their personal data. Normally, this would be the same as the right to withdraw consent, if consent was appropriately requested and no processing other than legitimate purposes is being conducted. However, a specific scenario would be when a customer asks that his or her personal data should not be processed for certain purposes while a legal dispute is ongoing in court.
6) Right to object to automated processing
This right provides the data subject with the ability to object to a decision based on automated processing. Using this right, a customer may ask for his or her request (for instance, a loan request) to be reviewed manually, because he or she believes that automated processing of his or her loan may not consider the unique situation of the customer.
7) Right to be forgotten
Also known as right to erasure, this right provides the data subject with the ability to ask for the deletion of their data. This will generally apply to situations where a customer relationship has ended. It is important to note that this is not an absolute right, and depends on your retention schedule and retention period in line with other applicable laws.
8) Right for data portability
Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protection Software
This right provides the data subject with the ability to ask for transfer of his or her personal data. As part of such request, the data subject may ask for his or her personal data to be provided back (to him or her) or transferred to another controller. When doing so, the personal data must be provided or transferred in a machine-readable electronic format.
Who can make a rights request, and how?
A rights request can be made by an individual or an individual’s legal representative. Such individual could be a customer, an employee, or personnel of a supplier working for the company. Also, such request should usually be made in writing.
Conclusion
Data subject rights form the core of GDPR, and your company must implement these rights in the context of its individual clients, employees, and personnel from other suppliers.
Click here to read thefull text of the GDPRto learn more about the data subject rights.
Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protection Devices
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Privatus 5 1 1 – Automated Privacy Protections
For more information on what personal data we collect, why we need it, what we do with it, how long we keep it, and what are your rights, see this Privacy Notice.