SCENARIO
Please use the following to answer the next QUESTION:
Henry Home Furnishings has built high-end furniture for nearly forty years. However, the new owner, Anton, has found some degree of disorganization after touring the company headquarters. His uncle Henry had always focused on production -- not data processing -- and Anton is concerned. In several storage rooms, he has found paper files, disks, and old computers that appear to contain the personal data of current and former employees and customers. Anton knows that a single break-in could irrevocably damage the company's relationship with its loyal customers. He intends to set a goal of guaranteed zero loss of personal information.
To this end, Anton originally planned to place restrictions on who was admitted to the physical premises of the company. However, Kenneth -- his uncle's vice president and longtime confidante -- wants to hold off on Anton's idea in favor of converting any paper records held at the company to electronic storage. Kenneth believes this process would only take one or two years. Anton likes this idea; he envisions a password- protected system that only he and Kenneth can access.
Anton also plans to divest the company of most of its subsidiaries. Not only will this make his job easier, but it will simplify the management of the stored dat
a. The heads of subsidiaries like the art gallery and kitchenware store down the street will be responsible for their own information management. Then, any unneeded subsidiary data still in Anton's possession can be destroyed within the next few years.
After learning of a recent security incident, Anton realizes that another crucial step will be notifying customers. Kenneth insists that two lost hard drives in Question are not cause for concern; all of the data was encrypted and not sensitive in nature. Anton does not want to take any chances, however. He intends on sending notice letters to all employees and customers to be safe.
Anton must also check for compliance with all legislative, regulatory, and market requirements related to privacy protection. Kenneth oversaw the development of the company's online presence about ten years ago, but Anton is not confident about his understanding of recent online marketing laws. Anton is assigning another trusted employee with a law background the task of the compliance assessment. After a thorough analysis, Anton knows the company should be safe for another five years, at which time he can order another check.
Documentation of this analysis will show auditors due diligence.
Anton has started down a long road toward improved management of the company, but he knows the effort is worth it. Anton wants his uncle's legacy to continue for many years to come.
Which of Anton's plans for improving the data management of the company is most unachievable?
A Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) is a process that helps an organization identify and evaluate the potential privacy risks and impacts of a new or existing project, program, system, or service that involves the collection, use, disclosure, or retention of personal information. A PIA also helps an organization identify and implement appropriate measures to mitigate or eliminate those risks and impacts, and ensure compliance with applicable privacy laws, regulations, and standards. A PIA should be completed to effectively make changes that involve customer personal information, such as converting paper records into electronic form, uploading the records into a new third-party marketing tool, and merging the customer personal information in the marketing tool with information from other applications. A PIA can help an organization assess the necessity, proportionality, and legality of the proposed changes, as well as the potential privacy risks to the customers and the organization, such as unauthorized access, disclosure, modification, or loss of personal information, identity theft, fraud, reputational damage, or legal liability. A PIA can also help an organization implement appropriate measures to mitigate or eliminate those risks, such as data minimization, encryption, anonymization, pseudonymization, consent management, access control, security safeguards, contractual clauses, data protection impact assessments (DPIAs), data subject rights, breach notification procedures, and privacy policies.
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