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by ralferoo
94 days ago
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I'm not sure I agree with that interpretation, as "processing" is extremely broad and includes just storing the data. Yes, technically if the EU citizen remains outside the EU for the entire lifecycle of the data up to and including deletion, then it isn't covered. But if you store that data at all when they have returned to the EU, then you need to comply with the GDPR in terms of handling that data. Also, as a UK citizen (formally EU citizen), I don't understand why US-based countries are so against the GDPR, as essentially it's just a codification of how to do the morally best thing for your customers. Any data you don't need for a business purpose should be deleted as soon as possible. You can have any data about someone as long as there is a justifiable business reason for it. You have to let someone know what data you have about them (if they request it via a SAR) and you have to give them the information up front to determine if they are happy with you handling their data, via a clear privacy policy and opt-in to having their data used. Complying with the GDPR is pretty straight forward, as long as your intention isn't to profit by selling or otherwise making use of people's data in ways that they wouldn't be comfortable with. If you aren't doing anything bad with user's data and already following good security practices, including deleting data that's no longer needed, then you are already compliant with the intent of the GDPR and going from that to full compliance is probably only adding processes to be able to handle an SAR. |
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In my personal (business) case, we literally cannot comply with GDPR and also BSA/AML, FinCen, Reg E, KYC, etc, simultaneously. Our "business requirements" can last 7+ years, and our customers' wishes have no bearing on them.
And while we have no operations in any EU country, we are absolutely not obligated to even consider any EU laws about the data belonging to any of our customers, regardless of their citizenship. That's the primary point I'm making here -- the EU has zero jurisdiction over anything that happens outside the EU, ever, or any entities outside the EU, despite any claims to the contrary (which, according to Wikipedia at least, are not even made).
This is intuitive, but also the very expensive legal opinion of our lawyers, who have offices in the US, EU, and EMEA, for whatever that's worth!
In the general case, and as a customer, I'm fully in support of GDPR and CCPA-like protections. They're a great idea, I think! I'm usually the privacy nut in any discussion.
But compliance is obviously more work/expense than not, and small companies are especially allergic to nonproductive work and expenses. So naturally there's resistance to the suggestion that a foreign law compels them to do more of both.
And of course, if we're talking about the US, we have a very different culture around government and regulation. "As little as possible" (except those that protect my interests) is the preference of the landed gentry, and those who would aspire to same.
Reasonable people will recognize this as absurd, but ... you can't spell "absurd" without U, S, and A.