领英将您的GDPR权利置于付费墙后。
LinkedIn locks your GDPR rights behind a paywall

原始链接: https://noyb.eu/en/linkedin-locks-your-gdpr-rights-behind-paywall

领英因其付费功能“个人资料访问者列表”面临法律审查。在为这些数据收费的同时,该公司可能违反了 GDPR,该规定要求免费提供个人数据。数据保护律师马丁·鲍曼认为,领英乐于出售数据,却抵制免费访问请求,这“荒谬”。 核心问题在于领英在未明确选择同意的情况下跟踪个人资料访问,并以保护他人隐私为由拒绝访问。noyb认为,鉴于领英通过付费订阅*出售*相同的数据,这一论点无效。 noyb 已向奥地利数据保护机构提交投诉,要求为一名领英用户提供完全访问权限,并寻求罚款以阻止类似行为。这凸显了一种更广泛的趋势,即公司将 GDPR 保护的数据进行货币化,同时限制用户权利,经常非法收取访问或更正数据的费用。

对不起。
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原文

Selling data: Yes! Right to access: No? LinkedIn is constantly trying to entice its users into signing up for a paid premium membership. This is primarily promoted through a feature that allows users to view a list of all visitors to their profile over the past 365 days. Many other providers also attempt to use user data to create a premium product. Yet, under EU law, such personal data should actually be accessible free of charge. This presents LinkedIn with a legal dilemma: the data hidden behind a premium membership would also have to be made available as part of a free access request under Article 15 GDPR.

LinkedIn tracks profile visits. The reason is that visitor data, to a certain extent, constitutes shared data between visitors and those whose profiles are visited. Such activity data is often analysed to personalise the content or adverts displayed. Although LinkedIn allows users to opt out of this tracking, it does not ask for active consent (opt-in). It is therefore questionable to what extent the recording of profile visits is legal at all.

Martin Baumann, data protection lawyer at noyb: “Selling data to its own users is a popular practice among companies. In reality, however, people have the right to receive their own data free of charge. It is absurd that companies only seem to recognise the importance of data protection when they want to sell data. For example, when LinkedIn has no problem handing over certain data in exchange for money – but suddenly becomes concerned about the privacy of other users when you exercise your right of access.”

Data protection versus data protection. It is particularly absurd that LinkedIn is using a supposed ‘data protection interest’ as an argument to deny the right of access to data under the GDPR. Either the data must not be accessible to anyone, or – if it is clear to the visitor that the data is visible – it must also be disclosed in accordance with Article 15 GDPR.

Martin Baumann, data protection lawyer at noyb: “The protection of the rights and freedoms of others can definitely be a reason for not disclosing shared personal data. However, if a company has sought the relevant consent and is clearly willing to make the same data available for a fee, this argument no longer holds water.”

GDPR rights as a money-making opportunity? The GDPR sets out various rights to enable users to access and amend their data in the information society. However, companies often continue to charge a fee for this, whether it involves access requests with a creditors’ association or the correction of names on tickets. These fees are often long-established – but illegal.

Complaint filed. noyb has therefore lodged a complaint with the Austrian Data Protection Authority on behalf of a LinkedIn user and is demanding a full response to his access request. Furthermore, noyb is proposing that a fine be imposed to prevent similar breaches in future.

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