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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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.
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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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It’s my strong belief that every single system is in violation of the requirements. The requirements are so vague I can poke holes in almost any system described to me and consider it not compliant.
So if a law exists that nobody can effectively comply with, what use is it?
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I see your point, and I wish it were clearer. But my expectation (and experience) is that judges don’t follow overly literate interpretations. Possibly a EU/US difference?
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Yet it’s what every business currently operating in the EU has been doing since May 25, and the world hasn’t ended yet
Oct 1, 2018 · 6:45 AM UTC
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