Across
- 1. Scam designed to trick people into sharing information
- 3. The right to control your personal information
- 5. Releasing information to another party
- 7. A category of information needing extra protection
- 8. Shared behaviours that protect privacy "the way we do things around here"
- 10. Review (often by "Line 3") of privacy or security controls
- 11. Secure removal of personal information
- 12. A legal or policy requirement
- 13. That feeling immediately after clicking a suspicious link
- 15. Type of email a Nigerian prince might send you
- 18. Doing the right thing with data, even when no one is watching
- 23. Recording access to systems and data
- 24. Acronym for the privacy principles (plural!) in Australia
- 29. Where personal data is often stored
- 30. What unlocks protected information
- 31. Formal expression of dissatisfaction about a privacy matter
- 32. Simple symbol of security
- 34. Ensuring information is correct and up to date
- 37. Data with personal identifiers removed or made inaccessible
- 38. What must occur after an eligible data breach
- 41. When personal information is gathered
- 42. Permission to view or use information
- 43. Permission to collect or use personal data
- 45. Securely destroying paper records
- 46. Acronym for Australia’s privacy regulator
- 47. Sharing information outside the organisation
Down
- 1. A basic but vital privacy safeguard
- 2. Casual conversation or rumors about other people's private lives
- 4. Document setting data protection expectations between legal entities
- 6. Confidence information will be handled responsibly
- 9. Keeping information over time
- 10. Taking responsibility for handling data properly
- 14. Someone who learns things they probably shouldn’t by listening in
- 16. Only collecting what you really need
- 17. What you should do if you believe a privacy breach has occurred
- 19. Being open about how information is used
- 20. What good privacy practices create for customers
- 21. What’s damaged when privacy goes wrong
- 22. Meeting legal privacy obligations
- 24. Data that can't be linked back to any individuals
- 25. Extra step that strengthens account security
- 26. Scrambling data to keep it secure
- 27. External party handling personal data
- 28. Principle limiting access to information (4,2,4)
- 31. Information meant to be kept private
- 33. Treating personal information with care
- 35. Simple habit that protects data at your desk (5,4)
- 36. Authority that oversees privacy laws
- 39. Unauthorised access, disclosure or loss of personal information
- 40. Protecting information from misuse
- 44. Moral principles guiding data decisions
