Dne 17/05/2018 v 18:14 Sander Steffann napsal(a):
Hi,
But this regulation increases essential liberty for individuals, so I don't understand your argument...
No, it don't. It has two aspects: 1. It brings new positive defined rights. But as with any other positive defined rights, it brings an obligation for anyone other to provide such rights, it requires enforcement, inspections/whatever which anyone in Europe must pay from taxes and it requires implementation of a lot of rules, possible changing of existing internal systems etc. etc. in companies which will be paid from their revenue, so again from consumer money. 2. It would be the true in an ideal situation. In the real world, there is no ideal situation. Accept the fact that if you would like to keep any data private, you must not tell them to anyone. You. You are the one who can decide about your data and who can really protect your data, no one else, no government, no GDPR. There is a lot of anonymization techniques, strong encryption and other things helping to cover who used/published/steal your private data when it is done by experienced professionals. It could help a little bit to keep private data protected againest beginner and intermediate data thieves and perhaps againest some kinds of stupid mistakes, maybe. Nothing more. Is it enough when we mention all the costs, including hidden? I don't think so. BTW, nobody told me he is going to propose such regulation before the last EP elections, no party I have been able to vote has anything like this nor oposing anything like this in their program. -- Regards, Zbynek