To safeguard the security and privacy of its client’s data, Adorack makes sure that it complies with national and international laws and standards. All of our solutions include GDPR-ready features to support our customers in adhering to compliance requirements. These features are made available by Adorack to all of our customers, not only those in the EU.

The General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, was created by the European Union to reinforce existing data protection rules and individual rights to privacy. Businesses processing the personal data of citizens of Europe must comply with the EU Regulation, which went into effect on May 25, 2018.

Our promise is to assist you with compliance and data protection.
We are committed to GDPR

We Empower: Ensure the processing of customer data is fair and transparent.

We Protect: To safeguard personal data, including security through the design of products.

We Unite: Simplify procedures to assist clients in fulfilling compliance requirements

Adorack is dedicated to safeguarding the personal information of our clients, and we are here to help them understand the importance of the GDPR, its regulations, and our commitment to following international norms.

The Seven Core Principles of GDPR

The GDPR urges companies to handle customer data responsibly. Businesses gain customers’ trust and improve their likelihood of improved consumer engagement by protecting the protection and privacy of this data. A framework provided by GDPR enables organizations to define and regulate the security and privacy requirements that really apply when using an individual’s data for business purposes. The following are the main tenets that the GDPR mandates firms adhere to:

1. Lawful, fair, and transparent processing: Emphasizes transparency for all people, i.e., corporations must be transparent about the purposes for which data will be used after it is obtained.

2. Purpose limitation: Collect data exclusively for the purposes for which it is required. In other words, information that has been gathered for a given reason or purpose cannot be used in a different way for that reason or purpose.

3. Data minimization: Make sure the information collected is sufficient, pertinent, and limited. According to this tenet, businesses must make sure they only store the information necessary to accomplish their goals.

4. Accurate and up-to-date processing: Data controllers are responsible for maintaining the accuracy, validity, and suitability of the data. Organizations must have procedures and rules that address how they preserve the data they are collecting, processing, and storing in order to be in compliance.

5. Limitation of storage in a form that permits identification: Have authority for data storage and movement within the organization. This entails putting in place and enforcing data retention guidelines as well as preventing unauthorized data transit and storage.

6. Confidential and secure: It is primarily the responsibility of the organization collecting and processing the data to put in place the necessary security measures to safeguard the data of the individuals.

7. Accountability and liability: Organizations must be able to show that they have taken the appropriate precautions to protect a person’s personal data and be able to point to each step in the GDPR strategy as proof.