The Quadrant Consent Management Platform (QCMP) is a fully featured CMP tailored to mobile application publishers and developers. It covers the whole user consent lifecycle from gathering consent to providing an up-to-date audit trail. QCMP can be added into any Android or iOS application with only a few lines of code, saving time, costs, and effort.
With QCMP, data privacy regulations do not have to slow down your business.
QCMP is certified by the IAB's Transparency and Consent Framework V2.
Exclusively built for mobile applications for integrated consent management and regulatory compliance with privacy laws.
An easy to implement, configurable SDK that can be installed with only two lines of code saving time, costs and effort.
Leverage an immutable Blockchain ledger of your consent lifecycle that is readily available for compliance audits.
Certified by IAB’s Transparency & Consent Framework V2.0, ensuring fair collection and usage of consumer data.
Save non-compliance penalties and earn your consumer's undying trust by allowing them to make well-informed choices.
Automatically gather consent from users when they first open your app. QCMP presents an uncluttered, user-friendly experience with clear and concise messaging, so your users don't feel overwhelmed.
QCMP provides your users easy access to opt-outs and preference modifications with clear "calls to action" to avoid confusion.
In QCMP, each consent interaction is recorded on an immutable blockchain, ensuring that you are always audit-ready.
The ever-evolving compliance landscape can pose challenges as you scramble to keep up with the numerous regulatory laws introduced from time to time. Regulatory bodies worldwide are following the lead of the EU’s GDPR and the CCPA to enforce stricter consent and data privacy measures, and the list is quickly going to grow.
Introduced in 2018, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) demands that companies ask for consent upfront. Consent is one of the six lawful bases stipulated by the GDPR. Under GDPR, consent should be valid, informed, and up-to-date. Articles 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 13 of the GDPR explicitly include conditions for consent, and failure to comply can cost you up to €20 million, or 4% of the annual revenue of the prior financial year, whichever is higher.
According to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), transferring any personal information to a third party counts as a sale. The CCPA gives Californians the right to seek statutory damages between $1,000 to $3,000 or actual damages as imposed by the attorney general of California, whichever is greater. The fines apply if users have opted out of a data sale, but their data knowingly retained by a business without their consent.