Compliance

Food for thought – Introduction for Food Industry 4.0

Food for thought - Introduction for Food Industry 4.0

Severin Weiss
Implementing Industry 4.0 as the digital Agenda in all manufacturing industries and thereby increasing the competitiveness is a matter of course and clearly also applicable for the food and beverage industry. With altering customer behaviours, legal requirements as well as the increasing specialization, the industrial sectors are facing continuous challenge. Even though the automation of facilities in many cases is already put into practice, the structured integration into a holistic data concept is often missing. Through the digital networking of all processes, innovative solutions are on offer. What does Industry 4.0 mean for the food and beverage industry, where the opportunities lie and which specific implementation measures are available is subject to this article.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 34 | 2018 | Edition 5 | Pages 55-58 | DOI 10.30844/I40M18-5_55-58
Implementation of the EU-GDPR for Industry 4.0

Implementation of the EU-GDPR for Industry 4.0

Umsetzung der EU-Datenschutzgrundverordnung für Industrie 4.0
Nicolas Fähnrich, Michael Kubach
The increasing interconnectedness of production systems and the use of IoT devices generates a considerable amount of employee or customer data - whether directly or indirectly. The EU General Data Protection Regulation (EU-GDPR), effective 25 May 2018, results in a massive increase in the rights of data subjects and documentation obligations arising from the processing of personal data [1]. Those who do not respect these rights and/or fail to comply with their obligations face painfully increased fines of up to EUR 10 million (in serious cases EUR 20 million) or 2 % (4 %) of the annual turnover.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 34 | 2018 | Edition 3 | Pages 43-46
Compliance through a Sealed Cloud

Compliance through a Sealed Cloud

Hubert Jäger
For businesses, the main problem with cloud computing is the loss of control over own data. After all, one cannot know what cloud provider staff might read or copy processed or stored data. Not so with providers based on Sealed Cloud technology. This basic technology encrypts all data, and any access is rendered impossible by a series of technical measures. Not even the cloud provider has access to the data, not only during transfer and within the database, but also during data processing.
Industrie Management | Volume 29 | 2013 | Edition 4 | Pages 27-30
Integrated Quality of Corporate Software

Integrated Quality of Corporate Software

Andrea Herrmann, Barbara Paech, Carsten Binnig, Timea Illes, Stefan Kirn, Daniel Weiß, Donald Kossmann, Günter Müller, Maike Gilliot, Lutz Lowis
IT systems which operate in a dynamic environment must adapt to permanently changing business requirements. In particular new compliance rules like Sarbanes-Oxley-Act or BASEL II demand complete transparency of business processes and IT-support, also after changes. IT-departments and software providers need to clearly define and continuously assure the quality of the IT system during development and operation.
Industrie Management | Volume 22 | 2006 | Edition 6 | Pages 59-61