• Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    As I understand it:

    As long as the link between data and user is severed, they are compliant with GDPR. Anonymising data (proper non-reversable anonymisation, rather than pseudo-anonymisation) is as good as deleting. As long as it’s not personally identifiable, it’s OK.

    I suspect anyone else expecting the EU to purge reddit of their comments will be equally disappointed.

    • LWD@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      According to how the UK’s Matrix/Element “privacy” messager app acts, that is correct. If, for example, you request a GDPR compliant data deletion of your messages in a room that contains 100 people, they will continue storing your data and delivering it to those 100 people, as well as propagating your data across any other servers where those people may be.

      If you’ve lost access to any of those rooms, screw you, your data doesn’t belong to you but it does belong to anybody who was there at the time.

    • sibachian@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      what about the whole knowing who is who based on word pattern/habit, and connected content and/or opinion?

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        9 months ago

        None of that really seems to count for GDPR. And good luck picking any one person out of a sea of a million orphaned comments.

    • jarfil@beehaw.org
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      9 months ago

      As long as the link between data and user is severed, they are compliant with GDPR. […] As long as it’s not personally identifiable, it’s OK.

      Wrong.

      In the US, data protection refers to “personally identifiable” data, so severing the link is enough. Under the GDPR, all “personal” data is protected, doesn’t matter if it has a link or not to identify the person.

      The test under the GDPR, will be whether a comment has any personal data in it. If it’s a generic “LMAO”, then leaving it anonymous might be enough; if it is a “look at me [photo attached]” or an “AITA [personal story]”, then the person can ask for it to be removed, not just anonymized.

      • LWD@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        That sounds like it places an undue burden onto the user to determine and explain why data might be personal. Is a particular writing style personal? Something that identifies their IP address, or time zone, or three separate messages that can be used to pinpoint someone’s identity or narrow it down significantly?

        To build on the Matrix example I mentioned, they give you the ability to “redact” messages but it’s your job to hunt them down across their entire platform, and obviously you can’t look at any messages in any rooms you’ve been kicked out of (and I’m pretty sure an API call to redact them, even if you correctly guessed the ID, would be rejected).

        • jarfil@beehaw.org
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          9 months ago

          places an undue burden onto the user to determine and explain why data might be personal

          The other way around: all data originating from a person, is by default “personal data”, and the burden of explaining which one is not, lies with whoever is keeping it.

          you can’t look at any messages in any rooms you’ve been kicked out of

          If they’re keeping them, then you can request a GDPR export of ALL your data. Doesn’t matter whether some interface or application allows you access to the data or not, or even if you’ve been banned from the whole platform; as long as they keep the data, they have an obligation to honor your rights of:

          • Access
          • Correction/Modification
          • Removal

          Even during obligatory data retention retention periods, when they can’t remove the data and only make it inaccessible, you still have the right to get a copy of your own personal data.

          • LWD@lemm.ee
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            9 months ago

            I really hope I’m wrong and you’re right here! I agree with you entirely in terms of what should be allowed, if it isn’t already allowed. And I definitely hope you’re correct. I haven’t recently requested a data export from my languishing Matrix account, but I might give it another go to see what kind of data is stored on my home server.