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by Silhouette
3010 days ago
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In this area, we have no idea which overheads are actually going to prove justified and which are just throwing money away. That's one of my main points here. As I've argued several times on HN recently, a big part of the problem is that if you're running a small business that isn't handling large amounts of personal data but obviously is going to be subject to the GDPR like everyone else, there is no clear indication of what you have to do to be considered reasonably compliant. The GDPR itself is very heavy and has little in the way of moderation for small-scale data controllers/processors, so in practice it's going to come down to interpretation by regulators (and potentially anyone who has rights under the GDPR and wants to make trouble, as in the example we're discussing). If you don't do enough, you potentially face even greater overheads due to formal audits, financial penalties, etc. If you do too much, then as you rightly point out, you leave yourself at a disadvantage compared to competition who don't do as much (and this remains the case even if that competition is knowingly breaking the law as a result, and that in turn doesn't matter if they face no meaningful penalties for it). |
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Life is risk. I contend that if you make a good faith effort to comply with this law (i.e. consult with a lawyer, once, to develop those eight documents you mentioned in another part of this thread) and generally practice good private information hygiene (wipe out old data, don't log private info, don't retain logs or emails too long, etc.), you're probably going to be fine. This is probably not going to be in the "inner loop" of risks your small business faces.
In every regulation, there are winners and losers. Some of the losers didn't do anything wrong, but are just losing because that's the nature of designing laws that factor in disparate interests. At this point, it's the law, and your only choice is how you're going to handle it. And my contention is that, if your small business is receiving letters like this with any regularity, calling a lawyer and spending half a day on it each time is not among the reasonable spectrum of risk-mitigating responses.