From the BBC:
“Grandmother ordered to delete
Facebook photos under GDPR”
A woman must delete photographs
of her grandchildren that she posted on Facebook and Pinterest without their
parents' permission, a court in the Netherlands has ruled. It ended up in court
after a falling-out between the woman and her daughter. The judge ruled the
matter was within the scope of the EU's General Data Protection Regulation
(GDPR). One expert said the ruling reflected the "position that the
European Court has taken over many years". The case went to court after
the woman refused to delete photographs of her grandchildren which she had
posted on social media. The mother of the children had asked several times for
the pictures to be deleted. The GDPR does not apply to the "purely personal"
or "household" processing of data. However, that exemption did not
apply because posting photographs on social media made them available to a
wider audience, the ruling said. "With Facebook, it cannot be ruled out
that placed photos may be distributed and may end up in the hands of third
parties," it said. The woman must remove the photos or pay a fine of €50
(£45) for every day that she fails to comply with the order, up to a maximum
fine of €1,000. If she posts more images of the children in the future, she
will be fined an extra €50 a day. "I think the ruling will surprise a lot
of people who probably don't think too much before they tweet or post
photos," said Neil Brown, a technology lawyer at Decoded Legal. "Irrespective
of the legal position, would it be reasonable for the people who've posted
those photos to think, 'Well, he or she doesn't want them out there
anymore'?" "Actually, the
reasonable thing - the human thing to do - is to go and take them down."
^ This is a clear example of the EU over-stepping
the bounds into the private lives of its citizens. It is what Socialism is
really about and also why so many people around the world do not trust
Socialism. The EU has so many other more important issues- like how they abandoned Italy when Italy
needed them the most (with all the Covid-19 cases and deaths there) – that they
should focus on fixing their disintegrating organization rather than goose-step
into the private lives of Grandmothers. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-52758787
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