When they receive data deletion requests, many companies just flag/mark an account so that the data in it just isn't visible to users
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You could, but depending on how the laws are written it might not be compliant.
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I know that when my job was data collection compliance reporting the different jurisdictions and their contradictory rules were challenging.
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also some of our evidence is digital only when people have done everything online
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I mean printing it on-demand when a user wants their data scrubbed & just keeping a record of where the paper gets filed.
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Ah it's not always that straightforward
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Yeah, and then you get into questions of scale. So one person opts out ok but what do you do when 100k people opt out?
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Yes I don't necessarily think it makes sense. Just wondering if it had been considered.
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A less costly alternative might be append-only (no-read) digital storage that can only be read from a local terminal on legal demand.
End of conversation
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short version: it would be a nightmare
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Depending on your specific environment, that may be well beyond the point of reason. Ever tried pulling tapes from Iron Mountain?
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