requested to be forgotten by whom?and have requested a right to be forgotten and respect of GDPR regulations accordingly
FGO mods and admins are just regular users with a few extra buttons, and they tend to do a pretty good job not overusing those buttons.And in come a wealth of moderators and comunity represenatives demanding forms to be filled and bug reports as champions they see them selves as.

The right to be forgotten is a right EU users have (regardless of where the service is hosted) which is described in GDPR (https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/), the fact that a service is usable from the EU is enough to make the GDPR apply.szatox wrote:requested to be forgotten by whom?and have requested a right to be forgotten and respect of GDPR regulations accordingly
I don't think FGO collects any data that fall under GDPR. And it seems to be hosted from USA, which is outside of UESR, so they wouldn't be bound by that anyway. Just don't share sensitive information, it's way more effective than fixing your mistakes with lawfare after the fact.
I do not think that this is true.pa4wdh wrote:The right to be forgotten is a right EU users have (regardless of where the service is hosted) which is described in GDPR (https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/), the fact that a service is usable from the EU is enough to make the GDPR apply.
I think it is defined in § 3 "Territorial scope" of this GDPRsMueggli wrote:I do not think that this is true.pa4wdh wrote:The right to be forgotten is a right EU users have (regardless of where the service is hosted) which is described in GDPR (https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/), the fact that a service is usable from the EU is enough to make the GDPR apply.
It is true, that's why some sites block users from EU/EIS, because they don't want to deal with GDPR. But I don't think it is enforceable. Also I don't think the right to be forgotten is part of GDPR, as well it applies only to identifiable individuals and not nicknames et.c. It's very easy to want to be forgotten every time you screw up but this is not how things work in real life.sMueggli wrote:I do not think that this is true.pa4wdh wrote:The right to be forgotten is a right EU users have (regardless of where the service is hosted) which is described in GDPR (https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/), the fact that a service is usable from the EU is enough to make the GDPR apply.
I see.pietinger wrote: I think it is defined in § 3 "Territorial scope" of this GDPR
https://gdpr-info.eu/art-3-gdpr/
logrusx wrote:[...] as well it applies only to identifiable individuals and not nicknames [...]
Yes ... I would like to highlight this in bold ...szatox wrote:[...] I still don't think FGO collects any data that fall under GDPR though. Accounts are pseudonymous and don't identify any real life human
Under the GDPR the definition of identifiable is quite strict. Pseudonyms are, IP addresses are, email addresses are, and those are all stored on the forums for communication and moderation purposes.szatox wrote: Edit: I still don't think FGO collects any data that fall under GDPR though. Accounts are pseudonymous and don't identify any real life human
I'm not an expert but those are inseparable from the technology used. It's like asking your cellular service provider to delete your phone number.pa4wdh wrote:Under the GDPR the definition of identifiable is quite strict. Pseudonyms are, IP addresses are, email addresses are, and those are all stored on the forums for communication and moderation purposes.szatox wrote: Edit: I still don't think FGO collects any data that fall under GDPR though. Accounts are pseudonymous and don't identify any real life human

That's why it usually end your account/service with the organization where you did your request to be forgotten. I can't ask my ISP to forget me expect to keep using their services. Of course i'm free to open account with then after that.logrusx wrote: I'm not an expert but those are inseparable from the technology used. It's like asking your cellular service provider to delete your phone number.
Yes there is, in the GDPR, see this link: https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/NeddySeagoon wrote:This only fixes the forums. There is no 'right to be forgotten' on the internet.
The GDPR can describe whatever rights it wishes to describe, but the GDPR is only enforceable in locations where EU law applies.pa4wdh wrote:The right to be forgotten is a right EU users have (regardless of where the service is hosted) which is described in GDPR (https://gdpr-info.eu/art-17-gdpr/), the fact that a service is usable from the EU is enough to make the GDPR apply.szatox wrote:requested to be forgotten by whom?and have requested a right to be forgotten and respect of GDPR regulations accordingly
I don't think FGO collects any data that fall under GDPR. And it seems to be hosted from USA, which is outside of UESR, so they wouldn't be bound by that anyway. Just don't share sensitive information, it's way more effective than fixing your mistakes with lawfare after the fact.
Regardless of anything else, even an EU-based forum targeting EU citizens doesn't have to do that.pa4wdh wrote: The right to be forgotten basically comes down to "You have to delete everything you know about user/customer ....". In case of a forum like this you can think of the user profile, all forum posts and all personal messages. Never versions of forum software usually have such functions available to the user to they can use this right without needing an admin to do it.
