• 0 Posts
  • 18 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 26th, 2023

help-circle

  • The investment in a social democracy/ social safety it ultimately what is safeguarding Europe, because it precludes the motivations/ grievances which create surface area for misinformation to operate on. Its not that it isn’t possible, it just has a much more difficult time taking hold.

    The UK is a great example of this, where they seem religiously committed to austerity as the approach for addressing most issues; this gave rise to grievance politics because, well, austerity does hurt people; grievance politics gives misinformation something to operate on (its the continents fault); brexxit happens; life gets worse; misinformation gains an even further foothold because now its premise has been validated, and there is even more grievance to operate on.

    Grievance is the scar tissue which misinformation operates upon. Misinformation is the bacteria which spread and cause death, but without the wound of grievance, there is nothing to do. Creates strong mechanisms for grievances to be addressed (engaged democratic processes; responsive governance).

    Whatever actual or perceived grievances a person may have (even though merely being born in Europe already constitutes winning the global class lottery) - that only ever causes vulnurability. That person then turning to actively undermining democratic systems and the international community is something that only happens if some con artist uses that vulnurability to convince the person that it constitutes a solution to their problems.

    Universal wealth and happiness are nice, but the immediate, separate and and more solveable issue is not continuing to give microphones and political offices to con artists. Letting folk get scammed out of their vote is just as detrimental to a healthy society as letting folk get scammed out of their life savings - if not more.


  • It is not trivial, the existence of you job makes that self-evident. If it was trivial companies wouldn’t need a DPO, would they? I would love to see you walk up to your employer and tell them that your job is trivial and anyone can do it…

    Again, as someone who performs the job, I’m telling you: It’s trivial. Come on, don’t try to somehow ‘reason’ that away, that’s just silly. Many jobs are trivial, many jobs need to be done. Mine needs to be done because it’s mandated, not because it’s hard. And I could, in fact, walk up to my employer and tell them that it’s trivial because they would understand - both my boss and I took the same one-day course to become certified.

    You might not see this yourself, but the fact that even a small company needs a DPO in order to interpret data protection regulation IS the problem! But I am sure you are not complaining… It needs to be simplified so a small company can be GDPR compliant without requiring a DPO.

    Again, I don’t know what you think the workload entails, but if you want more specifics I can tell you that my position as a DPO takes up less than 5% of my time and most of that falls to preparing the yearly internal employee training course and the rest is basically automated. It’s not some kind of full time profession unless you have a gigantic corporation or literally run a legal business offering external DPO services. Compare it to the position of something like a medical first responder, if that exists where you live.

    In fact, I’m going to do you a solid now and break down the certification course: If you handle personal data, write down where it is and who does what with it. Don’t ask for personal data that you don’t need to perform your function, don’t share personal data with third parties, delete all personal data the moment you don’t need it any more. There, GDRP-compliance for the vast majority of businesses in just one paragraph.
    It truly is very, very trivial - as is the whole GDPR main text, for that matter. It’s well structured and uses simple wording.

    This problem is recognized in the report from the EU commission linked in the article, which is why they are acting.

    Ah yes, the Draghi report. “Europe must invest twice as much as it did rebuilding after World War II, allow more tech and telecoms companies to merge and take drastic measures on defense spending”
    If you’ll have another look at the article, that’s part of the massive industry lobbying effort that they’re referring to.

    The fact that small startups cannot even take off because they cannot afford to hiring the bureaucrats required to interpret and be compliant with regulation is a massive problem and one of the reasons Europe’s economy is stagnating. It is not about exploiting personal data, it is about the cost of bureaucracy killing European startups in their infancy.

    I don’t know how else to put this, but this is just not a real problem. I’m reluctant to outright call it a fiction, because there might always be information that I’m missing, but as someone who has worked in the field for about 3 years now I’ve never come across internal or external reports of businesses who could not afford GDPR compliance. Again, that would be silly, that’s like complaining about building code because you have to spend a pittance on fire extinguishers.




  • but because of GDPR we still have to rely on printing papers, and sending them to other clinics via post or fax

    I don’t know who told you this but that is certainly not mandated by GDPR. Could you elaborate on the situation?

    All my patients expect me to have ready up on their medical history, and know what medications they take, so that I am up to date about what they need. But in order to do that, I first have to ask for their permission, and THEN open their journal. It has to be the other way around - that you can actively block healthcare personnel from reading your journal if you for some reason don’t want them to.

    That is also not mandated by GDPR. I don’t know who you DPO is, but at some point of the communication chain there must be a misunderstanding.


  • have you ever had to deal with GDPR? It is a nightmare and I am certain American big tech is secretly celebrating it, because it kills any European startup alternatives, because they cannot afford to employ enough people to be compliant with the law and if they try to do it with existing personnel they don’t have enough time left over to actually run their business

    Am DPO. What do you mean? GDPR is trivial to deal with and you do not need to employ additional personnel beyond a DPO. They don’t even have to do it full time.

    There are certain few business models that explicitly rely on exploiting personal data, but them being slowed down is very much the intention.


  • Less inequality and better education are really the only solution.

    People reach for extremism when they feel let down by the existing system.

    Whatever actual or perceived grievances a person may have (even though merely being born in Germany already constitutes winning the global class lottery) - that only ever causes vulnurability.
    That person then turning to actively undermining democratic systems and the international community is something that only happens if some con artist used that vulnurability to convince the person that it constitutes a solution to their problems.

    Equality and education are great. Letting con artists run around freely is a completely separate issue. Letting folk get scammed out of their life savings is just as detrimental to a healthy society as letting folk get scammed out of their vote.




  • A number of European states have updated their travel advice for the U.S. since the Trump Administration came to power.

    Be careful with the terminology here. I’m not familiar with the the specific background in Norway, but at least where I live there are legal differences between official foreign ministry “travel warnings” and “travel advice” and you’re using both terms.
    Whether it’s one or the other here can determine whether your travel agent has to fully reimburse you for your 5000€ vacation ticket or not, for example (if I remember correctly).





  • That’s against EU regulation, as new cars must include an SOS assistance button. (Granted, many car manufacturers hide multiple SIM cards in their vehicles now. Or they use the existing SIM card for navigation, music, analytics, GBs of software updates … and emergency assistance.)

    Fair, that’s technically a SIM, but as you yourself noted, it’s not the one used by the manufacturer.
    Maybe I should phrase it another way:
    “Dear manufacturer, I’d like my business relationship with you to end after the purchase of this car. I will contact you if I need anything else, be it navigation, music, analytics, or updates. You will not contact me.”