|
|
|
|
|
by Silhouette
2850 days ago
|
|
That's a reasonable point, but it's also reasonable to observe that businesses rely on other businesses all the time. As a small business, you usually have little meaningful oversight of the internal processes of outside services you use. You don't get to audit your bank's finances to make sure they're safe to trust with your money. You don't get to review your lawyer's office security arrangements to make sure no-one can break in and steal confidential data about your contracts. You don't get to review which products your office cleaning firm uses. At some point, you just have to trust that they do a decent job, and you change who you work with if you have reason to believe they aren't doing that. If a privacy regime is going to have any value in practice, it has to work on the same basis. The emphasis has to be ensuring that each individual or organisation who actually knows about the way data is being processed and has the ability to influence that processing is behaving reasonably. Then you can have some sort of trust framework that can actually mean something, from the data subject to their direct contacts and right on through to the indirect service providers however far the chain goes. The rest is just CYA and box-ticking, no matter how many laws you write or what penalties you threaten. |
|
Seems a bad analogy, do you make a contract with them but not read it? I mean in the contract you will specify what cleaning products can or should be used(like in some hospitals strong cleaning products must be supplied and you ask for those in the contract if the supplier gives you bad quality ones then sure it is not your fault but it is your fault if you don't even want to read the contract terms)
I imagine the OP was thinking that he wants to embed in his pages some analytics or similar scripts, maybe some advertising scripts, use a few third party APIs and it seems a lot of work for him.
At least his US customers can now know that their data are could be shared with many third parties that could have weird terms like those third parties could sell it further.