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by ivan_gammel
1629 days ago
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They do not have such moral responsibility. Their responsibilities are defined by laws and their T&Cs, which are known to the customers and customers explicitly opt in.
If I say in my T&Cs that I delete data after certain period of account inactivity, then this is how it is going to work and user shall not expect anything else. |
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You seem to just not believe in morals I guess? ;P
Like, yes: the law says you can do something... but I am claiming it isn't moral to do that. You can assert your terms of service let you, but I am claiming that it wasn't moral of you to put that in your terms of service in the first place. (And to the extent to which the law requires you do the opposite, that is us arguing over what the law should say, given that the entire point of this thread is about a changing law.)
And like, the user of course should expect you to do the things you claim you will do, but I also think it is fair for users to expect you to claim you will do moral things in the first place. If you are going to pull stunts like deleting data users entrusted to you, hopefully your service is sufficiently optional and unimportant that they can just not use your service without losing out on anything at all in life.
I see you work in medicine. Your field collects data on people all the time and then hoards it from them. You take X-rays and then just put them in some filing cabinet. To get a copy of MY X-ray I have to argue with people about it and then I usually get some low-quality shit copy. Meanwhile, you purge your records and delete MY data because I somehow have the gall to not need your specific service for some number of years until I get old and suddenly wish I could get my X-ray and you destroyed it :/.
You should frankly be REQUIRED to give people their data to take with and not take it yourself, a step you can't be trusted to not put it in your terms of service that you get to both hoard it and delete it on a whim. If you must insist on holding it yourself, you should be required to have a trust set up that you make regular deposits into to ensure that the data you are holding will survive at least as long as all of your patients.
That's what I will claim is "moral", and to the extent to which either laws or the terms of service of your organization fails to match then the lawmakers, lawyers, or entrepreneurs are being horrible people. If you believe in a religion that has a place similar to hell, maybe that's where all of the people who push for, allow, or take part in stuff like this will end up :/.