City
Epaper

Over 40% privacy compliance tech will rely on AI in 3 yrs

By IANS | Updated: February 25, 2020 18:41 IST

Over 40 per cent of privacy compliance technology will rely on artificial intelligence (AI) by 2023, up from the current 5 per cent, Gartner Inc., predicted on Tuesday.

Open in App

Stamford (Connecticut), Feb 25 Over 40 per cent of privacy compliance technology will rely on artificial intelligence (AI) by 2023, up from the current 5 per cent, Gartner Inc., predicted on Tuesday.

Privacy leaders are under pressure to ensure that all personal data processed is brought in scope and under control, which is difficult and expensive to manage without technology aid.

"Privacy laws, such as General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), presented a compelling business case for privacy compliance and inspired many other jurisdictions worldwide to follow," Bart Willemsen, Research Vice President at Gartner, said in a statement.

This is where the use of AI-powered applications that reduce administrative burdens and manual workloads come in.

"More than 60 jurisdictions around the world have proposed or are drafting postmodern privacy and data protection laws as a result. Canada, for example, is looking to modernise their Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), in part to maintain the adequacy standing with the EU post-GDPR," Willemsen added.

At the forefront of a positive privacy user experience (UX) is the ability of an organisation to promptly handle subject rights requests (SRRs).

SRRs cover a defined set of rights, where individuals have the power to make requests regarding their data and organisations must respond to them in a defined time frame.

"The speed and consistency by which AI-powered tools can help address large volumes of SRRs not only saves an organisation excessive spend, but also repairs customer trust. With the loss of customers serving as privacy leaders' second highest concern, such tools will ensure that their privacy demands are met," noted Willemsen.

Through 2022, privacy-driven spending on compliance tooling will rise to $8 billion worldwide.

Gartner expects privacy spending to impact connected stakeholders' purchasing strategies, including those of CIOs, CDOs and CMOs.

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai Tragedy: 6-Year-Old Girl Killed After Being Run Over by a Dumper in Kandivali

BusinessMerck Foundation CEO together with African and Asian First Ladies mark World Health Day 2026 through 2,600+ Scholarships for Healthcare Providers

Other Sports‘Spend a good amount of hours practicing right, not long’: Pandya’s advice to youngsters to focus on quality, not quantity

BusinessRocket 1.0 Solves What Vibe Coding Left Out: What to Build and What Comes After Launch

BusinessAdarsh Somani Honoured by National Security Guard (NSG) for Distinguished Support

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

TechnologyBank of Baroda rolls out multilingual AI platform ‘bob SAMVAD’ across 22 languages

TechnologyLG Energy Solution turns to operating loss in Q1 amid Mideast crisis

TechnologySouth Africa sees upcoming summit as platform to bolster economic ties with India

TechnologyFood PLI scheme attracts Rs 9,207 crore investment, creates 3.29 lakh jobs

TechnologyAir India confirms resignation of its CEO Campbell Wilson