Reddit breaks the law to quell protests - spez has gone too far

Generator@lemmy.pt to Reddit@lemmy.ml – 32 points –
Reddit breaks the law to quell protests - spez has gone too far
youtu.be

Reddit is restoring (mass) deleted posts and comments

6

Agree with the general gist of the video, but wow that clickbaity title and image.

Were people under the impression that deleted comments are actually deleted? The second you post a comment, it's immediately archived indefinitely by Reddit and third party websites. Reddit does not have an option to actually delete stuff, and this is an example that the delete button doesn't actually delete. There's also no way to mass delete your comments when you want to delete your account. In fact it's permabannable for whatever reason. Yes this is a violation of the law and they should absolutely be sued into oblivion for intentionally and actively breaking GDPR, and just being incredibly privacy invasive in general. Not like privacy exists on Reddit though, that's why profiles are public without any option to hide them.

Fuck Reddit. I hope the company goes out of business.

I don't think this is actually deliberate. Its just a byproduct of the CDN

In the eyes of the GDPR it doesn't matter, if a user used their right to be forgotten, anything that could be PII or anything they generated has to be either deleted or at least anonymized.

Now since we're talking about reddit posts here, there's a non-zero chance that at last one if not more of the users posted something about themselves that can be used to identify them in a post. So detaching the user from the post doesn't satisfy the laws.

So with that out of the way, we can conclude that the posts themselves most likely contain some PII.

You'd have to delete/scrub the posts, the logs, the caches, including on any CDNs.

Obviously either they aren't scrubbing everything, which I would agree that could happen... I doubt it because of reddits size. I could understand and excuse some tiny company with a few engineers, or a new company.. but not a decade plus old company worth billions.

So i think it's mighty forgiving to say that they did it by accident. I also think it's not ok to say that reddit did it on purpose either.

I've got a feeling that they half did the GDPR tasks... And thought "ehh nobody will notice" or "will make a new improvement epic for this" and never did.

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