| I would. I'm doing some GDPR consulting at the moment and most of my conversations are "I don't think it's as complicated as you do". Americans tend to read law very pathologically unless they are familiar with how European legislation works, and every programmer out there thinks they are an armchair lawyer since there are "obvious" skillset similarities between decoding software and decoding law. "Forget me" is very simple: If someone calls you up and asks you to stop using their data, you stop using it and remember that they've done this. You do not have to: - Destroy invoices - Delete web logs - Delete the record of them asking you to stop using their data - Reprocess all of your backups - Recall any reports you might have sent out Or anything else that is silly. But your salespeople aren't allowed to see that person's details in your CRM anymore. "Export data" is also very simple for most companies. If you have a CRM containing information about a person, then that person can ask for that information. > probably less so for a meme generator startup What possible "personal information" do you think a meme generator startup actually has to collect on individuals that aren't their customers? They should have a CRM containing companies who are purchasing advertising space on their meme generator startup, and perhaps leads that they have obtained through various incremental marketing sources. They probably do not have any personal information on their users, or if they do, their business will not be impacted by simply not collecting that personal information. But maybe I don't understand what a "meme generator startup" would do because I'm not in their target market. |