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by Anunayj
1809 days ago
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Storing IPs by themselves are not against the GDPR, and you do not really require consent for storing them for legitimate reasons, (Think nginx access logs, or rate limits on API endpoints/ banning IPs abusing your service). [1] Pairing IP addresses with other potentially identifying information can also be a little bit of a legal gray area (Look at Fingerprint.js) if done for legitimate reasons (Like fraud detection). Though honestly most users do not really care about the check box that says "I agree to give you access to all my personal information and sell it to everyone" when they click install, and it's such a sad situation. GDPR had a great potential, it's sad it was unable to do it's best. [1] https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-data-protectio... |
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Most of those checkboxes are not worth anything under GDPR, because people don't give a clear, informed consent when they have no chance of understanding what is being asked.
The law is not the problem. Lack of enforcement is.