自民・萩生田政調会長 防衛費増の財源議論「夏前までに方向性示す」 (TBSテレビ)

自民党の萩生田政調会長が防衛費増額のための財源について、夏前までに党内議論の方向性を示すとの考えを明らかにしました。 萩生田氏は31日、インターネット番組に出演し、自身がトップを務める防衛費増額のための財源を議論する自民党の特命委員会について、国債の償還期限や国有財産の処分などを検……

渋谷がまた生まれ変わる 東急百貨店が閉店 55年の歴史に幕 (フジテレビ)

55年にわたって愛された渋谷の百貨店が、最後の買い物客に別れを告げた。 55年の歴史に幕を閉じた渋谷のシンボル「東急百貨店 本店」。 営業最終日の1月31日、外ではスマホで写真に収める人や、店内では総菜売り場の商品棚が空になるなど、多くの人が最後のショッピングを楽しんだ。 閉店間際には、感……

『レコメン!』オテンキのりに続き…松田里奈、加藤史帆、田村真佑も3月末で卒業へ (ORICON STYLE)

1月31日放送の文化放送『レコメン!』(月~木 後10:00)では、2012年4月から、同番組のパーソナリティーを務めてきたオテンキのりが3月末で卒業すると発表された。それと同じくして、のりとともに月曜を担当する松田里奈(櫻坂46)、火曜を担当する加藤史帆(日向坂46)、水曜を担当する田村真佑(乃……

EU vows to get tougher on Big Tech privacy violations

The European Union is eager to crack down on Big Tech’s alleged privacy abuses, but the reliance on individual countries to enforce General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) rules has led to lengthy cases with punishments that are frequently modest. There will soon be pressure to act decisively, however. The European Commission will now require that EU nations share overviews of “large-scale” GDPR investigations every two months. This includes “key procedural steps” and actions taken — national regulators will have to show they’re moving forward.

The tougher approach comes after the EU Ombudsman recommended closer monitoring of Big Tech cases that fall under the Irish Data Protection Commission, which regulates Meta and other industry giants. The rights group Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) made a complaint to the Ombudsman accusing Ireland’s commission of being too slow and lenient against privacy violations. Just weeks ago, Europe’s Data Protection Board forced Ireland to raise a data processing fine against Meta from €28 million to €390 million ($30.4 million to $423.3 million).

As Bloombergobserves, the European Commission is already issuing reports every two years on the overall status of GDPR enforcement. However, it hasn’t conducted thorough, frequent reviews of individual countries’ privacy regulators. This new requirement will theoretically hold all EU member states accountable if they delay investigations or don’t apply the law when necessary. This could include legal repercussions at the European Court of Justice.

Critics might not be happy with the transparency. Ireland and other nations will share their progress on a “strictly confidential basis,” according to the Commission. The public might not know if a regulator is mishandling a case unless the EU takes visible action in response. Nonetheless, this may encourage Meta, Amazon, Google and other tech heavyweights to take European privacy laws more seriously — they may see quicker investigations and stiffer fines.

EU vows to get tougher on Big Tech privacy violations

The European Union is eager to crack down on Big Tech’s alleged privacy abuses, but the reliance on individual countries to enforce General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) rules has led to lengthy cases with punishments that are frequently modest. There will soon be pressure to act decisively, however. The European Commission will now require that EU nations share overviews of “large-scale” GDPR investigations every two months. This includes “key procedural steps” and actions taken — national regulators will have to show they’re moving forward.

The tougher approach comes after the EU Ombudsman recommended closer monitoring of Big Tech cases that fall under the Irish Data Protection Commission, which regulates Meta and other industry giants. The rights group Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) made a complaint to the Ombudsman accusing Ireland’s commission of being too slow and lenient against privacy violations. Just weeks ago, Europe’s Data Protection Board forced Ireland to raise a data processing fine against Meta from €28 million to €390 million ($30.4 million to $423.3 million).

As Bloombergobserves, the European Commission is already issuing reports every two years on the overall status of GDPR enforcement. However, it hasn’t conducted thorough, frequent reviews of individual countries’ privacy regulators. This new requirement will theoretically hold all EU member states accountable if they delay investigations or don’t apply the law when necessary. This could include legal repercussions at the European Court of Justice.

Critics might not be happy with the transparency. Ireland and other nations will share their progress on a “strictly confidential basis,” according to the Commission. The public might not know if a regulator is mishandling a case unless the EU takes visible action in response. Nonetheless, this may encourage Meta, Amazon, Google and other tech heavyweights to take European privacy laws more seriously — they may see quicker investigations and stiffer fines.

映画興行収入が回復 コロナ前の9割に アニメ作品が大好調で (フジテレビ)

アニメーション作品が好調で、映画の興行収入がコロナ前の水準に回復しつつある。 日本映画製作者連盟が発表した2022年の映画概況によると、国内の興行収入は2,131億1,100万円と、前の年に比べおよそ3割増え、コロナ前と比べると9割ほどに回復した。 作品別では、およそ197億円の興行収入を記録して大……

ケイト・スペード23年春新作財布、花々を描くミニ財布&レザーの花を飾ったコインケース (ファッションプレス)

ケイト・スペード ニューヨーク(kate spade new york)は、2023年春の財布やスマホケースなどの新作小物を2023年2月1日(水)より順次発売する。 花々を装飾した新作財布morgan flower bed embossed compact wallet 33,000円新作小物の中でもおすすめなのは、春らしいフローラルパターンをまとった財布。……