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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
byElektroschock ( 659467 ) writes:
If these compliance risks were real, the use of these tools would be strongly advised against.
Of course they aren't-
byCharlotte ( 16886 ) writes:
Precisely.
When anyone pulls the GDPR card it's almost always cause they're marketing your private data to everyone and their uncle.
byAnonymous Coward writes:
Not even remotely true. I work for a software company that has both a global SaaS and software business. We don't sell any data, private or not, about our customers or their software usage to anyone whatsoever. That's just not our business model. We make money selling software and services, not selling your data or data about you.
Despite this, we spend an extraordinary amount of time and energy on GDPR compliance. GDPR is about much more than how you can or can't sell data. It's also about how you manage and store that data even if only ever the owning customer (and us as the vendor) have access to it.
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bySavage-Rabbit ( 308260 ) writes:
Not even remotely true. I work for a software company that has both a global SaaS and software business. We don't sell any data, private or not, about our customers or their software usage to anyone whatsoever. That's just not our business model. We make money selling software and services, not selling your data or data about you.
Despite this, we spend an extraordinary amount of time and energy on GDPR compliance. GDPR is about much more than how you can or can't sell data. It's also about how you manage and store that data even if only ever the owning customer (and us as the vendor) have access to it.
Unfortunately for every one of you there are at least ten others that behave the exact opposite way.
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bymjwx ( 966435 ) writes:
Not even remotely true. I work for a software company that has both a global SaaS and software business. We don't sell any data, private or not, about our customers or their software usage to anyone whatsoever. That's just not our business model. We make money selling software and services, not selling your data or data about you.
Despite this, we spend an extraordinary amount of time and energy on GDPR compliance. GDPR is about much more than how you can or can't sell data. It's also about how you manage and store that data even if only ever the owning customer (and us as the vendor) have access to it.
Unfortunately for every one of you there are at least ten others that behave the exact opposite way.
I also deal with GDPR, it's important for all the reasons that people don't talk about. A lot of our personal data ends up in the hands of bad actors because organisations who aren't expressly selling it are getting compromised. North American carriers WestJet and Hawiian as well as Australian Airline QANTAS had their frequent flyer programs compromosed so all the data that was in there is now in the hands of the bad guys. I'm sure they didn't want this to happen but they secured it as cheaply as possible (
bygnasher719 ( 869701 ) writes:
Now companies like Apple are getting their knickers in a knot because they cant spy and sell data (whilst simultaneously trying to tell you they're not doing it) so they want to create a lot of hate against GDPR in the hopes that it'll prevent similar laws in other countries. They know the fight is lost in Europe, they're just hoping that they can stave it off in other parts of the world.
In your case, calling you a hater seems to be the most rational approach. You don't have any argument that isn't just based on insane paranoia, so there is nothing to refute.
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