Donate SIGN UP

They Will Try Everything Until Someth8Ng Sticks

Avatar Image
cassa333 | 22:41 Thu 20th Sep 2018 | News
14 Answers
It smacks of desperation when they try so hard to find wrong doing.

Scrape enough barrels and eventually you’ll find one bad apple. But one bad apple doesn’t make the cider rotten.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-45589004
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 14 of 14rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by cassa333. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Have you ever actually made Cider Cassa? :)
"It smacks of desperation when they try so hard to find wrong doing."

It seems that data protection authorities are ensuring the proper use of data collected in a given scenario.
You seem to be confusing that with the proverbial in a brewery.

I doubt very much if you'd want them to turn a blind eye based on your personal voting record, that would be undemocratic and grossly unfair.
Wrong-doing?

Obama was praised for using exactly the same harvested data when he won his first term.

Accept the use of cookies (to tailor the "customer" experience) and you give the web provider a saleable commodity for advertisers and political lobbyists. All explicitly stated on the T&C which we all tick, but only some of us read.



Obama? The Barackster? He's moved into British politics?

Appreciate the heads-up.
Question Author
It’s more about any avenue to discredit anything to do with leave winning the referendum.
GDRP was introduced to catch companies misusing our data. Anyone targeting their website and advertising at EU countries have to comply with the law here.
AnalyticsIQ have allegedly broken the law. They will be investigated, and if the case is proven, they will be fined. If there is no case to answer, they will not be fined.
Just because it is a cause you may sympathise with does not give them an exemption from obey the law.
//But one bad apple doesn’t make the cider rotten.//

Yes it does.
It's not known as the Brussels Broadcasting Company for nothing.
There's got to be more to it than the £4,000,000 they receive from the EU every year.
What has the ICO got to do with the BBC or am I missing something
^ Because if they were investigating The Remain campaign you'd never hear about it.
This news item has been reported on Sky News, ITV News, BBC News and several newspapers so why single out the BBC
Adfa Spicerack is making the point that the BBC are anti Brexit.
A funny pair of spectacles some people wear
"I doubt very much if you'd want them to turn a blind eye based on your personal voting record,..."

How would anyone find out cassa's personal voting record?

Anyway, I'm afraid that anyone who puts any of their personal data up on a public website such as Facebook or whatever and then expects the GDPR (or anything else) to keep those details secure is living in a different world to me.

1 to 14 of 14rss feed

Do you know the answer?

They Will Try Everything Until Someth8Ng Sticks

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.