Insights on ILITA

Boris Segalis, Dan Or-Hof, email monitoring, employee privacy, ILITA, InfoLawGroup, information law group, Israel, privacy enforcement, privacy litigation, Privacy Protection Act, workplace privacy

Israel's National Labor Court Imposes Strict Limits on Employee Monitoring

By InfoLawGroup LLP on February 10, 2011

Dan Or-Hof, a privacy and technology partner at the Israeli law firm Pearl Cohen Zedek Latzer is reporting that a decision by Israel's National Labor Court imposes severe restrictions on the employers' ability to monitor employee emails. Organizations with employees in Israel must promptly take steps to verify that their employee monitoring policies and practices in the country are consistent with the ruling.

Boris Segalis, cross-border, Dan Or-Hof, data protection, data transfer, EU Data Protection Directive, EU Directive, European Commission, ILITA, InfoLawGroup, information law group, Israel, model clauses, Privacy Protection Act, Safe Harbor, Yoram Hacohen

EU Confirms Adequacy of Data Protection in Israel, Simplifies Personal Data Transfers

By InfoLawGroup LLP on February 01, 2011

Dan Or-Hof, a privacy and technology partner at the Israeli law firm Pearl Cohen Zedek Latzer is reporting that the EU Commission published the much-anticipated announcement on the adequacy of data protection law in Israel. Published on January 31, 2011, the decision adopted by the Commission determines that Israel provides an adequate level of protection for personal data transferred from the EU, however only in relation to automated international data transfers and to automated processing of data in Israel.

data protection, David Vladeck, EU Data Protection Directive, Federal Trade Commission, FTC, ILITA, OECD, privacy, privacy enforcement, privacy governance, privacygenerations

Data Commissioners Conference in Jerusalem Focuses on Future of Privacy, Cooperation and Enforcement

By InfoLawGroup LLP on November 02, 2010

Last week, we joined privacy regulators, practitioners and industry representatives from around the world in Jerusalem for the 32nd International Conference of Data Protection and Privacy Commissioners. On numerous panels, conference participants engaged in lively discussions about privacy compliance and enforcement as well as the future of privacy in light of evolving consumer expectations and advances in technology that tracks and identifies individuals.