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Analyze The Intuition Readiness On implementing Personal Data Protection Regulation, Within Private sector Higher Academic Institutes In Sri Lanka, A study Of Data Protection Draft 2019,

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dc.contributor.author Mithrananda, Madusanka Chamara
dc.date.accessioned 2021-08-05T08:06:00Z
dc.date.available 2021-08-05T08:06:00Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation Mithrananda, Madusanka Chamara (2020) Analyze The Intuition Readiness On implementing Personal Data Protection Regulation, Within Private sector Higher Academic Institutes In Sri Lanka, A study Of Data Protection Draft 2019, MSc. Dissertation Informatics Institute of Technology Mithrananda, Madusanka Chamara (2020) Analyze The Intuition Readiness On implementing Personal Data Protection Regulation, Within Private sector Higher Academic Institutes In Sri Lanka, A study Of Data Protection Draft 2019, MSc. Dissertation Informatics Institute of Technology en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dlib.iit.ac.lk/xmlui/handle/123456789/686
dc.description.abstract Personal data protection has become one of the hot topics in countries which process European Union citizen data after enacting General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) from 2018 May 25. In Sri Lankan context, there are minimum limitations to handle personal data while the available regulations focused only on a few business sectors. With international influence, Sri Lanka is also in a process to establish separate legislation amendments specifically for personal data protection along with a legal draft on cyber security. The finalized act (pending approval from the parliament of Sri Lanka) on personal data protection states eight obligations for the data processor and four rights to the data subject to safeguard personal data of Sri Lankan citizens. To comply with these rights and obligations there should be properly placed processes, systems, and internal culture within the Sri Lankan institutes. In this study, it checked whether there are competencies to comply with the data protection acts in private sector higher educational institutes in Sri Lanka. Thus the research is exploratory in nature with case study approach is used. Research findings suggest there are nor or minimum compliance is there for selected data protection obligations and data subject rights. A new conceptual framework is proposed with six privacy principles and four step method to reduce the compliance gap with the local and global privacy legislations. en_US
dc.subject Personal data en_US
dc.subject Data privacy en_US
dc.subject Data protection en_US
dc.subject Data protection framework en_US
dc.title Analyze The Intuition Readiness On implementing Personal Data Protection Regulation, Within Private sector Higher Academic Institutes In Sri Lanka, A study Of Data Protection Draft 2019, en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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