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GDPR 1984 finally who benefits?

From May 26, the new European GDPR law is supposed to protect our personal data, stored online and not only. It was necessary to lose millions of personal data and hundreds of hours in the courts at the global level to become the beginning of the obvious: Simple citizens can protect their personal data from the big companies that operate and prosper from the specific data.GDPR 1984

How much is feasible?

GDPR For our sake

If 20 years ago talked about the impact of interconnection and data collection on the personal, social, and professional life of the world, we would call ourselves exaggerated and technological opponents.

Now that the tracking and identification of even our toaster is already a reality, the European GDPR law protects that we have not been protected for at least 20 years.
Do you think it will stop the thousands of calls that call us for promotional purposes? These phone calls come from personal data transfers or customer lists.
The advertising approach of Google, YouTube and it has been and no one knows for how long it will continue to be an informal collection of personal data. The GDPR informs us of what we already know, and once again asks for our explicit consent a little more formally. The difference is the imposition of very high fines, something that should have been the case for a very long time.

Violations

But this particular measure with very high fines in the event of non-compliance, or in case of data leakage, will facilitate the early warning of a company that has been infringed on its customers?
Until now, it has been observed that companies that were infringed kept the seal off so as not to tarnish their reputation. Usually we got the information when it was too late, that is, after the data leaked to the underground forums.
Today, in addition to this, a very high fine was added for the inability to protect data, but also for the untimely reporting of the violation…

What do you think will happen?

Right to oblivion

Of course it is worth mentioning that it allows of our data from a company's list and supports it into oblivion...

Associate Professor of Law at AUTh, Ioannis Igleszakis present the conflicting opinions on the “right to be forgotten” introduced by the new General Data Protection Regulation.

Critics of the regulation question its necessity and express the opinion that it will be the biggest threat to στο διαδίκτυο τα επόμενα χρόνια, ενώ η αρμόδια επίτροπος για θέματα δικαιοσύνης και αντιπρόεδρος της Ευρωπαϊκής Επιτροπής, Viviane Reding υποστηρίζει ότι αποτελεί μία μετριοπαθή επέκταση του δικαιώματος προστασίας της ιδιωτικότητας.

The good thing for now is that there seems to be a consensus that the "right to be forgotten" cannot lead to the erasure of history and turn modern society into a "society of lotus eaters", nor act as a pretext for imposing in cyberspace, on the contrary, however, the invocation of freedom of expression cannot be a justification for the preservation of absolute digital memory.

GDPR Questions

Naturally, the new law was created to make things better for the end user. Here are some questions:

For companies, things seem to be somewhat more complicated. All companies were and are required to keep their personal data in order not to leak.

Will GDPR be certified? Will it become another ISO, or HASP? Who will give it and at what price? The same applies, more or less, to intermediaries. Who certifies us the certification authority? Do all the data eventually end up in the "safe" tanks of a state-owned data protection authority?

Reminds you of George Orwell's 1984?

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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