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Graham Spookyland🎃/Polynomial

@glyph @foone sadly, no. at most it's *maybe* a GDPR violation depending on the content of the WAV files, but likely not, and I'm guessing that's going to be impossible to prosecute anyway because the assets are almost certainly a result of an insolvency liquidation. I see this shit all the damn time and right now there's very little recourse for those affected.

3 comments
Momo

@gsuberland
If this is from an EU customer, it is a GDPR violation. But as you stated, there is probably no legal entity anymore that could pay the fine. Which means we need an appendix that ensures that the insolvency administrator enforces GDPR in liquidation cases (or would be personally liable if shit like this happens).

And again, this would probably not apply to the US so good look out there...
@glyph @foone

@gsuberland
If this is from an EU customer, it is a GDPR violation. But as you stated, there is probably no legal entity anymore that could pay the fine. Which means we need an appendix that ensures that the insolvency administrator enforces GDPR in liquidation cases (or would be personally liable if shit like this happens).

PhreakByte

@gsuberland @glyph @foone The entity that was the data controller at the time of the breach is responsible for reporting it. If the company has been liquidated, the liquidator or administrator may need to handle this obligation (GDPR wise)

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