Remove privacy-policy
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Does Your Organization Have Social Media Guidelines for All Staff?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

We adopted a set of Guidelines that TNT created (creative commons) to ENCOURAGE their staff to use social: bit.ly/YQe91n Brian Fitzgerald who works at Greenpeace and is an expat in Amsterdam tweeted an amazing example of employee social media guidelines. YQe91n #npsmpeer. Brian Fitzgerald (@brianfit) March 10, 2013.

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Safeguarding Good: Cybersecurity for Nonprofits 101

Qgiv

Common type of cyberattacks NIST guidelines for cybersecurity Nonprofit cybersecurity best practices What is cybersecurity for nonprofits? Failing to secure this information not only exposes these people to privacy breaches, but it also puts your organization’s reputation and ability to help others at risk. Strong passwords.

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Why Your Nonprofit Website Needs a Privacy Policy (And What to Include)

NonProfit Hub

Your privacy policy can no longer be an afterthought—it needs to be a prominent feature on your website and written in words that the average user can understand without hiring a lawyer. If a visitor or supporter wants to know the details of your policies, it should be available and easy to find on your website. Be honest.

Policy 28
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Accelevents Is Officially a SOC 2 Type 1 Certified Compliant Organization

AccelEvents

When evaluating an organization’s SOC 2 compliance, auditors identify how a business manages customer data according to each of the following five trust service principles: security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality, and privacy. There are general guidelines, but every organization is different!

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Social Media Usage Guidelines: Don't moon people with cameras (or at least hide your face when you do)

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Yesterday, I attended a webinar about social media policies called " E-Privacy: Can You Legally Monitor MySpace, LinkedIn, E-mail, & Blogs? Enforce: Less about the top down control, but the fact that you need to consistently use the policy – shouldn’t sit in a drawer. presented by Electronic information expert, Robert D.

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Digital Privacy Compliance for Nonprofits: The Big 3 Laws

Achieve

Digital privacy has become a major new fixture in public discourse across all sectors. Much discussion of digital privacy revolves around the buying and selling of data, which isn’t largely relevant to day-to-day nonprofit operations. How does the GDPR relate to US-based nonprofit marketing and communications?

Law 59
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Do You Need to Register to Fundraise Online? A Crash Course

Get Fully Funded

Today, most modern nonprofits engage in at least limited online fundraising to engage supporters even while following social distancing guidelines. Labyrinth’s guide to fundraising legal requirements discusses three cornerstone pieces of digital privacy legislation that nonprofits should be aware of: The CAN-SPAM Act.

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