I think the GDPR approach (transparency rules, huge fines) is probably good enough to address this
While I trust that everyone tries their best, I am skeptical about the EU having a policy team at hand that can factually teach Facebook (one of the most attacked properties in the world) better cybersecurity processes and operational practices.
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I’ve been talking GDPR for weeks and like, nobody knows how to comply. So many people have totally different thoughts.
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Replying to @kellabyte
I know, I’m not claiming it’s clear or easy to execute. I completely agree with its intention and the general model, though. Anything specific that comes up in terms of compliance? Always interested in discussing how to go about it technically.

Oct 1, 2018 · 6:20 AM UTC

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Replying to @stilkov
So for me the biggest confusion is around personally identifiable information. Loosely this could mean so many things and affect every single tier of the architecture including cold storage of logs.
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Agreed. E.g. there are lots of things you shouldn’t log, or at least not keep, which of course complicates things. Keeping aggregated stats instead might work.
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