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ranger_danger 5 hours ago

To me this sounds like the equivalent of visiting a website that sells your data, and then asking AWS to delete your personal data when it actually belongs to a customer of theirs and only resides within their private storage.

Would you ask your local ISP to delete data they provided to Tinder like your IP address? That doesn't make sense to me.

monooso 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

As I understand it, the author wrote to Flock as they are the entity collecting the PII. Your analogy would only make sense if the author had written to Flock's customers (and even then it's a rather strained comparison).

ranger_danger 3 hours ago | parent [-]

> they are the entity collecting the PII

I'm not convinced this is the case. It might be equipment made by them, but does that necessarily mean they were ever even in possession of the data in question?

Would you ask the manufacturer of your oven what you ate for dinner last week? No, you're just using an appliance that they made.

In the case of Flock I don't think we have any evidence of whether Flock themselves ever hold or store any data produced by their devices when operated by a customer.

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terrabitz 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yeah I was getting the same feeling. I wonder if an equivalent request to California police agencies that contract Flock technologies would work though.

OkayPhysicist 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Probably not, as the law enforcement agencies get a bunch of exceptions to the CCPA.

alt227 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Yes, I have asked multiple companies to destroy my data under GDPR. Its quite common in Europe.