| "I just gave you examples of voluntary interactions that are now illegal under the GDPR programme, and you respond that none of the examples reduce the range of voluntary interactions. It's bizarre." No, you didn't. You gave a list of one-sided transactions where the user has no freedom or really consent at all in the matter. "My problem is the many limitations on the range of voluntary interactions that two parties can enter into that are found in the GDPR, a few of which I listed, and which you totally ignored." No, you didn't. All you did was post a list of "transactions" where the company has all the say, and the user really has no input whatsoever. No one is going to miss those transactions. If you truly, honestly are concerned with "consent", then you should be applauding this law, as it does require actual, informed, affirmative consent. Not the "Here's a great wall of text, agree to give us every little bit of data with no recourse whatsoever for you or don't get any access to the service at all" form of "consent". I'm sorry, but I cannot take seriously the idea that "if you can't sell yourself into slavery, you aren't free". |
I have difficulty responding to such an immature mischaracterization of what I listed.
I listed a set of contractual arrangements that are now illegal. All of them could be entered into completely consensually, and cannot be reduced to being categorically one sided, given we don't know what the value of the service the user gets in exchange for their personal data will be in every instance that said contract is used.
You're infantilizing people when you claim they're not capable of consenting to the sale of their personal data. In fact, no court of law would ever agree with you that these contracts are non-consensual ipso facto what the user offers, which is why the only way these kinds of contracts could be categorically disqualified is to circumvent the courts' purview of establishing consent, by resorting to statutory interventions like GDPR.
And you're vastly over-simplifying the world, and overestimating your understanding of it, when you claim that such contracts could never be in the interest of the user.
What you're doing is absolutely reckless.
>>I'm sorry, but I cannot take seriously the idea that "if you can't sell yourself into slavery, you aren't free".
Selling your personal data to someone is not slavery. Slavery is a permanent condition, affecting your future self.
Personal data sold at one point in time only covers the data generated to that point in time, and does not forfeit data that is generated by your future self.