I have been working on GDPR-related issues recently, and I need to vent a little.
While it might be a good thing that the privacy concerns, that led to GDPR, were raised by
lawyers, unfortunately the implementation was left to lawyers, too.
Let me rant first and talk about a solution afterwards.
Since a week, we’ve been receiving “GDPR information requests” at the office on our privacy@<domain> address. Nothing illegal about that. Every data subject has the “right to access” under the GDPR regulation: ask a data controller company what information they have on them, and then optionally ask to delete some or all of that data.
GDPR for (tango) event photographers
Europe’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) jumps into action on 25 May 2018. This has a lot of implications for every company in Europe, but also worldwide. And what does it mean for us, owners of a WordPress blog?