Behavioural scientists are interested in understanding more about human interactions, such as when a person is being attacked. For instance, is it likely a bystander will intervene? And, what is the likelihood that person would be injured themselves? These situations and others like them cannot be simulated. But should we be able to study them?
Photo by Hello Lightbulb on Unsplash
What is this page?
You are reading a summary article on the Privacy Newsfeed, a free resource for DPOs and other professionals with privacy or data protection responsibilities helping them stay informed of industry news all in one place. The information here is a brief snippet relating to a single piece of original content or several articles about a common topic or thread. The main contributor is listed in the top left-hand corner, just beneath the article title.
The Privacy Newsfeed monitors over 300 global publications, of which more than 5,750 summary articles have been posted to the online archive dating back to the beginning of 2020. A weekly roundup is available by email every Friday.