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by ocdtrekkie
3064 days ago
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You are anthropomorphizing companies here, and I think it's a pretty poor analogy. Corporations do not have a memory, they have records, and those records comprise the personal data of everyone who encounters them; data those companies don't own. You seem to be characterizing GDPR as unfair towards the corporate end of the interaction, but that ignores the massive power differential that currently exists. Corporations have incredible power compared to the individual, and before GDPR, it was commonplace for services to require unreasonable privacy violations: And consumers had to either accept it, or be cut off. (In many cases, the companies doing this have monopolies, making this even more problematic.) Realistically, this is not going to impact small companies a lot. This is about big ad and tech companies, and giving citizens some minor semblance of tools to resist them. |
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I don't know if it's possible to have a productive discussion about what seems to be a question of fundamental philosophy and values, but that's ridiculous on its face.
If I'm a shop owner and a customer buys something from me, the cash register prints two receipts: one the customer owns, one I own. If a customer writes me an email, I own my copy of that email. If a customer comes in and makes a scene, and I ban him from my stores's premises, the paper I generate telling my staff to call the police if they seem him is mine.
If I follow him around and write down everywhere he goes... at some point a line gets crossed, sure. If I start asking other shopkeepers if they've seen him or what he purchased, yeah, something's wrong. But to claim that my records of the interactions he knowingly, willingly had with me are his property just sounds bizarre.
>Realistically, this is not going to impact small companies a lot. This is about big ad and tech companies, and giving citizens some minor semblance of tools to resist them.
The GDPR does not discriminate by the size of the operation. It's large companies which can reliably afford the consultant, lawyer, and engineering time to understand and adapt to new regulation. The violators are going to be those without security and compliance departments.