isol633 Privacy Policies of Zuger Law Office, PLLC

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Computer Science

Description

Please go through the attached requirements document thoroughly and Course Paper Team information document should be updated along with the assignment. Also please take care of plagiarism check.

Executive Summary

This section of the Course Paper, which may be named whatever you like (e.g., “Executive Summary,” “Introduction,” “Preamble,” etc.), should only be a handful of sentences; certainly no more than a page. Here, your team will describe the nature of your business. You should explain what your firm does, who your customers are, and briefly mention any other key stakeholders in light of privacy concerns. This is also the place to list your team members. And, finally, in this section, you should explain to your audience—i.e., your company’s staff—why privacy is important in your business. Essentially, this is where you “sell” your audience on the fact that they must abide by your company’s privacy policies.

Policy Statements

Policy 1.1 Policy Statement Section Overview

This is where you organize and list each applicable privacy policy statement. These are the rules that govern your company’s actions, and those of your staff. You need to determine an organization schema. Look around online to find examples of a useful style. Or, you may choose to use your current workplace documentation as a go-by.

Policy 1.2 Policy Statements Contents

The contents of these policies should contain at least the following features:

  • The policy, itself, such as “Reasonable Expectation of Privacy for Employees.”
  • The laws, regulations, or standards that relate to the policy at issue.
  • An example, when applicable, that helps your audience understand the policy.
  • Directions on how to effect the policy. For example, if your company processes payments by credit or debit cards, and your policy is something like “Anyone who processes payments via payment cards must conform their actions to PCI DSS standards related to privacy.” then you may want to insert a link to those standards. Or, perhaps, incorporate examples as mentioned directly above.

This list is not exhaustive. Depending on the set of facts, you may need to include more.

Policy 1.3 Comprehensive Policy Statements

The Policy Statements must be a comprehensive body. Do not omit the discussion of laws that may apply to your business. This means that you must understand what your business does, and its privacy implications. Every company has employees, so employees’ privacy must be addressed. While it is debatable, I have discussed that any HRIS, or a company’s personnel records kept otherwise, has the propensity to contain medical information that we now know to refer to as “PHI.” Thus, you should have some policy that governs handling those data vis-à-vis privacy. Could your company be known as a “financial institution?” If so, you must discuss GLB Act privacy policies.

The point is that in three to five pages you must tell your employees everything they need to know about maintaining appropriate privacy while conducting your business.

Policy 2.1 Scoring the Course Paper

The Course Paper is worth 100 points. I will give up to ten points for the submission's form and format. That includes its organization, page count and team size, and grammar and spelling. The form and format is important because if a policy document is disorganized, contains typographical errors, or is hard to read otherwise, employees will not respect or even use it as the guidance it is meant to be. Consider a numbering or another outline styled structure to identify policy clauses.

I will give up to ten additional points for the introductory section, and whether you included all of the required information.

I will give up to 80 points for the policy statements. Questions I will have in mind when reviewing your policy statements include, Did the team incorporate what we've learned about privacy? Can the document be read and understood by all levels of an organization? Are the policies concise, or vague and wordy?

Policy 3.1 Cautionary Tales From Prior Submissions

Here are some of the ways that students have lost points in prior years:

  • Teams and pages. Do not submit as an individual; you must be part of a team. Do not exceed the page count. Only use Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) or Adobe PDF format. Each team member must individually submit a copy of the team’s work. You cannot rely on one member’s submission. And, when two team members submit dissimilar work, it evinces a non-functioning team.
  • This is not a website privacy policy document. While one of your company’s policies, assuming you have a website, should be that your websites must include the proper policy statements, this is not an assignment on writing a website policy statement. If you are submitting a “Terms of Use” or “Privacy Notice,” you are not following the requirement that your policies must govern your business. Website Privacy Statements are aimed at users of your website.
  • Don’t skip the obvious. If you are an insurance company, and fail to draft a policy that addresses HIPAA privacy, that’s a big omission. If children may access your website, you better include some acknowledgement of COPPA and CIPA’s privacy laws. See, Policy 1.3, above.
  • Get going now. While having up to five people working on this can make it very easy to accomplish, you cannot wait until the end of the course to start.
  • Perfect the writing. Spelling errors, syntax and grammar issues, and other poor English writing artifacts all take away from the credibility of your policies. When your company does not care enough to write well, your employees will not care enough about privacy to help you avoid risks.
  • This is a policy document. In some prior examples, valuable paper “real estate” was wasted on describing marketing plans, or a company’s history, or other immaterial data. The introductory section is important, but it is not the crux of this learning objective.

There are other ways that students have lost points, so please consider the entire body of instructions and requirements. These, in my opinion, came up often enough, or were easy enough to avoid, to include for your benefit.

Submission package requirements in the zip file:

  • Each team is required to select a team captain who will collect all individual contributions from all team members that contribute throughout the entire process. This team captain must be emailed to the professor by the end of Week 2.
  • Each student is responsible for submitting their individual work product with references. If the student has not submitted their individual research and work product they will not receive credit for the group paper. Each submission will be verified for creation date and owner/contributor.
  • The combined work paper which synthesizes all of the contributions from each student must be submitted in a single final paper with a title page and reference page.
  • The team information for all individuals who WORKED on the paper must be included in the appropriate dropbox and submitted by the team captain. If the student did not submit their individual contribution to be included in the zip file their name MUST not be included on the team information page.
  • Students who did NOT contribute their individual work product by the due date to the team captain will NOT be allowed to submit it late and separately or submit an individual paper.
  • Emails that later advise that students who did not submit work product to be included in the original submission package by the due date will not be considered.

Unformatted Attachment Preview

Privacy Policies of Zuger Law Office, PLLC Executive Summary This section of the Course Paper, which may be named whatever you like (e.g., “Executive Summary,” “Introduction,” “Preamble,” etc.), should only be a handful of sentences; certainly no more than a page. Here, your team will describe the nature of your business. You should explain what your firm does, who your customers are, and briefly mention any other key stakeholders in light of privacy concerns. This is also the place to list your team members. And, finally, in this section, you should explain to your audience—i.e., your company’s staff—why privacy is important in your business. Essentially, this is where you “sell” your audience on the fact that they must abide by your company’s privacy policies. Policy Statements Policy 1.1 Policy Statement Section Overview This is where you organize and list each applicable privacy policy statement. These are the rules that govern your company’s actions, and those of your staff. You need to determine an organization schema. Look around online to find examples of a useful style. Or, you may choose to use your current workplace documentation as a go-by. Policy 1.2 Policy Statements Contents The contents of these policies should contain at least the following features: • The policy, itself, such as “Reasonable Expectation of Privacy for Employees.” • The laws, regulations, or standards that relate to the policy at issue. • An example, when applicable, that helps your audience understand the policy. • Directions on how to effect the policy. For example, if your company processes payments by credit or debit cards, and your policy is something like “Anyone who processes payments via payment cards must conform their actions to PCI DSS standards related to privacy.” then you may want to insert a link to those standards. Or, perhaps, incorporate examples as mentioned directly above. This list is not exhaustive. Depending on the set of facts, you may need to include more. Policy 1.3 Comprehensive Policy Statements The Policy Statements must be a comprehensive body. Do not omit the discussion of laws that may apply to your business. This means that you must understand what your business does, and its privacy implications. Every company has employees, so employees’ privacy must be addressed. While it is debatable, I have discussed that any HRIS, or a company’s personnel records kept otherwise, has the propensity to contain medical information that we now know to refer to as “PHI.” Thus, you should have some policy that governs handling those data vis-à-vis privacy. Could your company be known as a “financial institution?” If so, you must discuss GLB Act privacy policies. The point is that in three to five pages you must tell your employees everything they need to know about maintaining appropriate privacy while conducting your business. Policy 2.1 Scoring the Course Paper The Course Paper is worth 100 points. I will give up to ten points for the submission's form and format. That includes its organization, page count and team size, and grammar and spelling. The form and format is important because if a policy document is disorganized, contains typographical errors, or is hard to read otherwise, employees will not respect or even use it as the guidance it is meant to be. Consider a numbering or another outline styled structure to identify policy clauses. I will give up to ten additional points for the introductory section, and whether you included all of the required information. I will give up to 80 points for the policy statements. Questions I will have in mind when reviewing your policy statements include, Did the team incorporate what we've learned about privacy? Can the document be read and understood by all levels of an organization? Are the policies concise, or vague and wordy? Policy 2.2 Writing Assistance Writing assistance is available by emailing a copy of your file to the International Academic Services office (yes, even if you are not an international student) at IAS@ucumberlands.edu. I highly recommend that you give the IAS Team at least two or three business days to review your work. Take into consideration the fact that you will likely need to respond to their efforts with some rewriting of your own, and you can start to calculate how much in advance of April 23 you should be planning on sending them a draft. Policy 3.1 Cautionary Tales From Prior Submissions Here are some of the ways that students have lost points in prior years: • Teams and pages. Do not submit as an individual; you must be part of a team. Do not exceed the page count. Only use Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) or Adobe PDF format. Each team member must individually submit a copy of the team’s work. You cannot rely on one member’s submission. And, when two team members submit dissimilar work, it evinces a non-functioning team. • This is not a website privacy policy document. While one of your company’s policies, assuming you have a website, should be that your websites must include the proper policy statements, this is not an assignment on writing a website policy statement. If you are submitting a “Terms of Use” or “Privacy Notice,” you are not following the requirement that your policies must govern your business. Website Privacy Statements are aimed at users of your website. • Don’t skip the obvious. If you are an insurance company, and fail to draft a policy that addresses HIPAA privacy, that’s a big omission. If children may access your website, you better include some acknowledgement of COPPA and CIPA’s privacy laws. See, Policy 1.3, above. • Get going now. While having up to five people working on this can make it very easy to accomplish, you cannot wait until the end of the course to start. • Perfect the writing. Spelling errors, syntax and grammar issues, and other poor English writing artifacts all take away from the credibility of your policies. When your company does not care enough to write well, your employees will not care enough about privacy to help you avoid risks. • This is a policy document. In some prior examples, valuable paper “real estate” was wasted on describing marketing plans, or a company’s history, or other immaterial data. The introductory section is important, but it is not the crux of this learning objective. There are other ways that students have lost points, so please consider the entire body of instructions and requirements. These, in my opinion, came up often enough, or were easy enough to avoid, to include for your benefit. Submission package requirements in the zip file: 1. Each team is required to select a team captain who will collect all individual contributions from all team members that contribute throughout the entire process. This team captain must be emailed to the professor by the end of Week 2. 2. Each student is responsible for submitting their individual work product with references. If the student has not submitted their individual research and work product they will not receive credit for the group paper. Each submission will be verified for creation date and owner/contributor. 3. The combined work paper which synthesizes all of the contributions from each student must be submitted in a single final paper with a title page and reference page. 4. The team information for all individuals who WORKED on the paper must be included in the appropriate dropbox and submitted by the team captain. If the student did not submit their individual contribution to be included in the zip file their name MUST not be included on the team information page. 5. Students who did NOT contribute their individual work product by the due date to the team captain will NOT be allowed to submit it late and separately or submit an individual paper. 6. Emails that later advise that students who did not submit work product to be included in the original submission package by the due date will not be considered. Course Paper Team Information Use the table, below, to present information about your team. Please input names exactly as they appear in the iLearn Grade Center. As you learn more during this course, the section about why privacy is important to your company will evolve. At this early stage, think about why privacy would be important to your business based on your own experiences, and what type of business you are conducting. Business Name Company Officer Names 1. Officer A 2. Officer B 3. Officer C 4. Officer D 5. Describe the nature of the business. List three reasons why privacy is important to your company. 1. 2. 3.
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Explanation & Answer

Attached.

Privacy Policies of Zuger Law Office, PLLC- Outline
Thesis Statement: Zuger Law Office has prepared this privacy statement to inform you of our
commitment to privacy and to describe our values for the collection and handling of personal
data. The company takes data privacy seriously and recognizes the value of the trust that clients
place on us to handle the information they give.
I. Executive summary
II. Collection of information
III. Use of personal information
IV. Purposes
V. Marketing
VI. Information security


Privacy Policies of Zuger Law Office, PLLC
Executive Summary

Zuger Law Office has prepared this privacy statement to inform you of our commitment to
privacy and to describe our values for the collection and handling of personal data. The company
takes data privacy seriously and recognizes the value of the trust that clients place on us to
handle the information they give. As a law firm, we are dedicated to serve individuals and other
entities seeking representation to the best of our abilities and to do so, we rely on the information
they give us as well as the expertise of each one of the people in the firm. Primarily, our
customers are regular people and companies without whom we would have no one to represent.
Although we might have high-end cases from time to time, we prefer to value those cases that we
handle on a daily basis. For that matter, we value privacy mainly because it is the basis for our
relationship with clients. Your observation of the privacy policy statements listed in this
document will not only allow us to maintain good relations with our clients who are essentially
our employers but also allow us to honor legal obligations. Please read the policy statement
carefully and feel free to reach out to the associates for any clarifications.

Policy Statements

Policy 1. How we Collect Personal Information
We collect personal information to provide our legal services. This information may be for legal,
regulatory, and management purposes. The clients voluntarily provide most of the personal
information to us but we also obtain personal information from other sources and people
including the following:
Public inform...

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